Literature DB >> 19898691

Eye anomalies and neurological manifestations in patients with PAX6 mutations.

Yin-Hsuan Chien1, Hsiang-Po Huang, Wuh-Liang Hwu, Yin-Hsiu Chien, Tseng-Ching Chang, Ni-Chung Lee.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Mutations in the paired box 6 (PAX6)gene cause a wide variety of eye anomalies, including aniridia. PAX6 mutations are not well described in the Chinese population so this study is aimed at exploring the role of PAX6 mutations in Taiwanese patients with congenital eye anomalies.
METHODS: Seventeen patients with single or multiple congenital eye anomalies were enrolled. Genomic DNA was prepared from venous blood leukocytes, and the coding regions of PAX6 were analyzed by PCR and direct sequencing. Clinical manifestations of the patients were then correlated to PAX6 mutations.
RESULTS: Five PAX6 mutations were identified in one case each. Three mutations c.317T>A (p.L106X), c.142-1G>T, and c.656del10 (p.Q219QfsX20) were novel and the other two, c.331delG (p.V111SfsX13) and c.949C>T (p.R317X), have been reported. All five cases had aniridia; three had other eye anomalies; and four had developmental delay. Only one case had other affected family members. In the ten cases that had no PAX6 mutation, only one had aniridia.
CONCLUSIONS: Both novel and known PAX6 mutations were identified in the current study, and PAX6 mutations were closely associated with aniridia. Absence of a positive family history does not exclude PAX6 mutation. The frequent occurrence of developmental delay in patients with PAX6 mutation argues for a prompt diagnosis of the disease.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19898691      PMCID: PMC2773736     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Vis        ISSN: 1090-0535            Impact factor:   2.367


Introduction

Aniridia is a rare ocular anomaly characterized by defects of iris tissue, ranging from mild iris hypoplasia to almost total absence of iris [1]. It occurs with an incidence of 1:64,000 to 1:100,000 [2,3]. Two-thirds of the cases show autosomal dominant inheritance with complete penetrance, while others are sporadic [3-5]. Clinical manifestations of patients varied from isolated iris involvement to panocular anomalies involving the cornea (opacity), anterior chamber angle (glaucoma), lens (dislocation and/or cataracts), retina (foveal dysplasia), and macular and optic nerve (hypoplasia) [2]. Aniridia can be associated with Wilms tumor; aniridia, genitourinary disorders, and mental retardation (WAGR syndrome); Gillespie syndrome (aniridia, cerebellar ataxia, and mental deficiency); absent patella; unilateral renal agenesis and mild psychomotor retardation; congenital adrenal hypoplasia and dysmorphism; sensorineural deafness; Marfan syndrome; Smith-Opitz syndrome; Biemond syndrome; XXXXY chromosomal anomalies; or Badet–Biedl syndrome [2,6-13]. Several genes, including the paired box 6 (PAX6), paired-like homeodomain 2 (PITX2/RIEG1), forkhead box C1 (FOXC1/FKHL7), SIX homeobox 3 (SIX3), HESX homeobox 1 (HESX1/RPX), paired-like homeodomain 3 (PITX3), cone-rod homeobox (CRX), guanylate cyclase 2D, membrane (retina-specific; GUCY2D/RETGC1), peripherin 2 (PRPH/RDS), retinal pigment epithelium-specific protein 65kDa (RPE65), paired box 2 (PAX2), paired box 3 (PAX3), microphthalmia-associated transcription factor (MITF), jagged 1 (JAG1), and retina and anterior neural fold homeobox (Rx), and FOXC1, are important for eye embryogenesis [1,14,15]. Among them, PAX6, PITX2, FOXC1, and FLHL7 are associated with iris defects. Haploinsufficiency or dominant negative mutation of PAX6 leads to aniridia, congenital cataract, Peter’s anomaly, Gillespie syndrome, and midline fusion defects, while complete deficiency of PAX6 leads to anophthalmia [1,3,4]. Mutations of PITX2 result in Rieger’s syndrome (anterior segment abnormalities, glaucoma, tooth anomalies, umbilical stump abnormalities); mutations of FOXC1 result in Rieger’s syndrome (type 3); mutations of FKHL7 cause anterior segment anomaly with glaucoma (abnormal iridocorneal angle differentiation, iris stromal hypoplasia, and elevated intraocular pressure/glaucoma) [1,14-17]. PAX6 is a transcriptional regulator in the early development in the ocular system, central nervous system, and gastrointestinal system [5,18]. This gene contains 14 exons and encodes a 422-amino acid polypeptide containing two DNA-binding domains, a bipartite paired domain, and a paired type homeodomain [4]. The paired domain, which is coded by exons 5–7 of PAX6, has two subdomains: the relatively conserved 74-amino acid NH2-terminal subdomain and the more divergent 54-amino acid COOH-terminal subdomain. The latter subdomain is a common place for mutations [4,19]. Currently there are around 500 mutations that have been reported (Human PAX6 Allelic Variant Database [HPAVD]) [20]. Most PAX6 nonsense mutations lead to aniridia, while missense mutations are related to foveal hypoplasia, congenital cataracts, or anterior segment anomalies [21,22]. There has been no systemic study for PAX6 mutations in the Chinese population [23-25]. In this study, we analyzed the coding sequences of PAX6 in 17 patients with eye anomalies. Three novel and two known heterozygous mutations were detected. Only one patient had other affected family members, but intrafamilial variation was prominent.

Methods

From 2003 to 2009, 17 patients (nine males and eight females) with single or multiple congenital eye anomalies diagnosed in two hospitals were enrolled in the study after informed consent. They were healthy except for their eye and neurological deficits. The study protocol included slit lamps and neurological examinations, brain Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI), pedigree analysis, and PAX6 gene analysis. Genomic DNA was isolated from 5 milliliters of venous blood using a QIAamp DNA blood mini kit (Qiagen®, Hilden, Germany). PAX6 coding regions and their flanking intronic sequences were amplified by PCR (Table 1). The PCR products were purified by Gel-MTM Gel Extraction System (Viogene®, Taipei, Taiwan) and analyzed by direct sequencing using the ABI Prism Big Dye dideoxy chain terminator cycle sequencing kit and the ABI Prism 310 genetic analyzer (Applied Biosystem, Foster City, CA). PAX6 cDNA was numbered starting from the translation initiation site (NM_000280.3). Mutations were confirmed by sequencing from the opposite strand and by co-segregation of the lesion and disease within the family. Phenotypes of the patients were retrieved from the medical charts. Clinical manifestations of patients were then correlated to PAX6 mutations.
Table 1

Primers used to amplify the PAX6 gene.

ExonAmplified length (bp)Forward primer (5’ to 3’)Reverse primer (5’ to 3’)
1
645
GCATGTTGCGGAGTGATTAG
CTCCTGCGTGGAAACTTCTC
2
645
GCATGTTGCGGAGTGATTAG
CTCCTGCGTGGAAACTTCTC
3
676
AGAGAGCCCATGGACGTATG
GTCGCGAGTCCCTGTGTC
4
676
AGAGAGCCCATGGACGTATG
GTCGCGAGTCCCTGTGTC
5
373
TGAGGATGCATTGTGGTTGT
GAAATGAAGAGAGGGCGTTG
6
388
CGTAAGCTTGTCATTGTTTAATGC
AGAGAGGGTGGGAGGAGGTA
7
333
GGTTGTGGGTGAGCTGAGAT
AAGCCCTGAGAGGAAATGGT
8
355
GGCTGTCGGGATATAATGCT
CAAAGGGCCCTGGCTAAAT
9
385
AGGTGGGAACCAGTTTGATG
TGGGACAGGTTAGCACTGTGT
10
537
AGCAGTGGAGGTGCCAAG
TCTCAAGGGTGCAGACACAG
11
537
AGCAGTGGAGGTGCCAAG
TCTCAAGGGTGCAGACACAG
12
345
CAGACTTGTTGGCAGAGTTCC
TAAACACGCCCTCCCATAAG
13373TTTCTGAAGGTGCTACTTTTATTTGCGGCTCTAACAGCCATTTTT

Results

Of the 17 indexed patients, five had PAX6 mutations. All five patients had aniridia, and two of them had fovea hypoplasia (Table 2). The five heterozygous mutations are c.142–1G>T, c.317T>A (p.L106X), c.331delG (p.V111SfsX13), c.656del10 (p.Q219QfsX20), and c.949C>T (p.R317X) (Table 2). Mutation c.949C>T and c.331delG have been reported previously [26]. C.949C>T is widespread in different countries, while c.331delG is found only in the USA. Mutation c.317T>A, c.142–1G>T, and c.656del10 have not been previously reported. Both c.317T>A and c.656del10 produce prematurely stopped polypeptides. Mutation c.142–1G>T is located at the splicing consensus sequence of intron 5b and is likely to produce splicing errors similar to reported mutations c.141+1 G>A, c.141+2T>C, and c.142–2A>G [20,27].
Table 2

Genotypes, eye anomalies, and extraocular manifestations in patients with a PAX6 mutation.

NoInheritanceNucleotide change*Predicted protein change*LocationPreviously reportedEye anomaliesExtraocular manifestations
1
sporadic
c.317T>A
p.L106X
Exon 6
no
aniridia, foveal hypoplasia, pendular nystagmus

2
Familial
c.949C>T
p.R317X
Exon 11
PAX6 database**
aniridia, cataract, nystagmus
congenital hip dislocation, developmental delay
3
sporadic
c.331delG
p.V111SfsX13
Exon 6
PAX6 database**
aniridia
developmental delay
4
sporadic
c.142–1G>T
Abnormal splicing
Exon 5b
no
aniridia, nystagmus
mild developmental delay
5sporadicc.656del10p.Q219QfsX20Exon 8noaniridia, horizontal pendular nystagmus, foveal hypoplasiadevelopmental delay

The asterisk indicates that only one mutation is present in each patient with an autosomal dominant disease. The double asterisk refers to the Human PAX6 Allelic Variant Database (HPAVD).

The asterisk indicates that only one mutation is present in each patient with an autosomal dominant disease. The double asterisk refers to the Human PAX6 Allelic Variant Database (HPAVD). Among the five patients, only patient 2 had other affected family members. He and his mother accepted PAX6 gene analysis and both of them had the c.949C>T mutation (Figure 1. V-2, IV-2). There were eight individuals in this four-generation family who had congenital eye anomalies (Figure 1). Their anomalies included bilateral aniridia, cataract, glaucoma, and jerk horizontal nystagmus (Figure 1). They all had intact retina, choroids, and optic nerve. All other patients, except patient 2, were sporadic. Interestingly, four cases (patient 2 to 5) had delays in gross motor, fine motor, language, and cognition to a variable extent. Patient 2 could not sit until 10 months of age and started babbling only after 1 year of age. After the correction of a congenital hip dislocation and aggressive physical therapy, he walked at 19 months of age and climbed stairs with assistance at the age of 2 years. Pincer grasp was not observed until 12 months of age. Patient 3 walked with support at the age of 13 months and said “papa” and “mama” at 21 months. His brain echo was normal. Patient 4 was noted to have a small subependymal cyst at birth and head lag at age 4 months, but he did not return for follow up thereafter. Patient 5 could not sit up or turn over at the age of 7 months.
Figure 1

Pedigree of patient 2. The pedigree has been modified for privacy by changing the sequence of the family members. DD, developmental delay; DDH, Developmental dysplasia of hip

Pedigree of patient 2. The pedigree has been modified for privacy by changing the sequence of the family members. DD, developmental delay; DDH, Developmental dysplasia of hip Phenotypes of the 12 PAX6 mutation-negative cases are summarized in Table 3. Only one of the 12 cases without PAX6 mutation had aniridia. Five of them had microphthalmos, three had dysmorphic facial features, and two had developmental delay.
Table 3

Phenotypes of patients who have eye anomalies but no PAX6 mutation.

Associated organPhenotypesNumber of cases*
Eye
Microphthalmos
5
 
Microcornea
2
 
Eyelid coloboma
2
 
non-specified eye anomaly
2
 
Aniridia
1
 
Cornea whitish plague, Congenital cataract, Choridal coloboma, Anophthalmos, Strabismus
One each
Central nervous system
Developmental delay
2
 
Ventriculomegaly
2
 
Periventricular cyst, Hemiparesis, Seizure, Corpus callosum hypoplasia
One each
Genitourinary
Small kidney
2
 
Vesiculoureteral reflux, Cryptorchidism
One each
Cardiac
Coarctation of aorta, Patent ductus arteriosus
One each
Skeletal
Congenital hip dislocation
1
Others
Dysmorphism
3
 Choanal atresia, Transient congenital hypothyroidismOne each

The total number of patients = 12

The total number of patients = 12

Discussion

In this study we identified five PAX6 mutations in 17 patients with congenital eye anomalies, resulting in a mutation detection rate of approximately 30% (5/17) in all patients with congenital eye anomalies or 83% (5/6) in patients with aniridia. Our detection rate is comparable with previous reports that 30%–80% of patients with aniridia have PAX6 mutations [28-30]. There were eight reports, four in English and four in Chinese, each mentioned a PAX6 mutation in one Chinese family with aniridia. The reported mutations, including c.1286delC (c.924delC), c.483del9 (c.121_129del9), IVS10+1G>A, c.1080C>T (c.718C>T), and c.857delG (c.495delG) [23,24,31-36], surprisingly none occurred in our population. That each mutation occurs independently demonstrates the great diversity of PAX6 mutations in the Chinese population. The large proportion of sporadic cases in the current study also suggests the diversity of PAX6 mutations. In our cohort, 80% (4/5) of patients with the PAX6 mutation had developmental delay. This high incidence of developmental delay is unexpected. Patients with aniridia and neurologic problems were more linked to WAGR syndrome (75% have mental retardation), Gillespie’s syndrome, chromosome anomalies, or PAX6 gene duplication [2,4,37-39]. Although we did not exclude large fragment gene deletions in the current study, none of our patients had syndromic aniridia. Deletions not detectable by DNA sequencing and associated with isolated aniridia have been reported, but they are present only in a small fraction of patients [40,41]. Several PAX6 mutations have been associated with mild mental retardation (c.-129+2T>A, c.111_2013;141ins, R44X, S74G, I87R, S119R, Q135X, W257X, C719A, c.1267dupT, and 1.3 Mb deletion from 3′ UTR of PAX6 gene at 11p14.1-p13) [20,29,42-46]. One patient with c.-129+2T>A mutation had hand tremors and learning disabilities [6]; a boy with c.111_141ins had intellectual impairment [29]; microcephaly, developmental delay, and several minor dysmorphic features were noted in the sporadic patient with I87R mutation [20]; one large family with S74G mutation showed neurodevelopmental defects with or without other associated brain anomalies [46]. Occasionally, mental retardation occurred in only a portion of the affected family members [20,42]. In the Human PAX6 Allelic Variant Database, one of the three cases with S119R mutation had a learning disability and behavioral change; one of the 20 cases with c.1267dupT mutation was recorded to have developmental delay and autistic behavior. The mutations discovered in our series (c.142–1G>T, c.317T>A, c.949C>T, c.331delG, and c.656del110) are different from these reported cases with mental retardation. However the mild developmental delay in this study could have been neglected by other studies because of the vision problems of patients. The global delay in case 2 could not be explained by his vision problem or hip dislocation. Other cases in the current study also involved only gross motor or speech problems, which were difficult to explain by poor visual activity. PAX6 gene expression is seen after the end of gastrulation in the anterior neural plate [15]. In a mouse model, Pax6 is widely expressed in the developing eye (optic cup, lens, and overlying surface ectoderm) and in specific regions of the developing brain (frontal cortex, epithalamus, ventral tagmental area, pons, external granular layer of cerebellum, fovea isthmi, olfactory bulb, septum, olfactory neuroepithelium) [47,48]. PAX6 has been suggested as being expressed in conjunction with other PAX family members in the early regionalization of the brain [47,48]. Recently, the interactions of Pax6 with developing neocortex transcription factors T-box brain gene 1 (Tbr1), eomesodermin homolog (Tbr2), neurogenin 2 (Ngn2) and achaete-scute complex homologue 1 (Mash-1) further demonstrate the role of PAX6 in the developing neocortex [49-51]. The PAX6 heterozygous mouse has absent olfactory bulb, decreased cortical neurons and cortical plate thickness, and altered dorsoventral patterning of the forebrain [45]. In patients with PAX6 mutation, polymicrogyria, absence of pineal gland, and lack of the anterior commisure have all been reported [52,53]. Therefore, it is possible that patients with PAX6 mutation have neurologic manifestations. In conclusion, we demonstrated the mutation spectrum and neurologic manifestations of patients with PAX6 mutation in Chinese. Most patients with aniridia had PAX6 mutations. Other associated problems, such as developmental delay and even congenital hip dislocations, may also be important. Therefore, detailed neurologic examination and close observation of development is important for patients with aniridia. Early institution of physical therapies for patients with developmental delay should be able to improve their long-term prognosis.
  51 in total

1.  Bilateral aniridia with Marfan's syndrome and dental anomalies--a new association.

Authors:  M S Sachdev; N N Sood; H Kumar; S Ghose
Journal:  Jpn J Ophthalmol       Date:  1986       Impact factor: 2.447

2.  Letter: A syndrome of partial aniridia, unilateral renal agenesis, and mild psychomotor retardation in siblings.

Authors:  A Sommer; M A Rathbun; M L Battles
Journal:  J Pediatr       Date:  1974-12       Impact factor: 4.406

3.  Positional cloning and characterization of a paired box- and homeobox-containing gene from the aniridia region.

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Journal:  Cell       Date:  1991-12-20       Impact factor: 41.582

4.  Roles of Pax-genes in developing and adult brain as suggested by expression patterns.

Authors:  A Stoykova; P Gruss
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  1994-03       Impact factor: 6.167

5.  Identification of a Pax paired domain recognition sequence and evidence for DNA-dependent conformational changes.

Authors:  J Epstein; J Cai; T Glaser; L Jepeal; R Maas
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  1994-03-18       Impact factor: 5.157

6.  A familial syndrome of aniridia and absence of the patella.

Authors:  A E Mirkinson; N K Mirkinson
Journal:  Birth Defects Orig Artic Ser       Date:  1975

7.  Aniridia, ectopia lentis, abnormal upper incisors and mental retardation--an autosomal recessive syndrome.

Authors:  A M Zamzam; S M Sheriff; C I Phillips
Journal:  Jpn J Ophthalmol       Date:  1988       Impact factor: 2.447

8.  Mutations in the PAX6 gene in patients with hereditary aniridia.

Authors:  A Davis; J K Cowell
Journal:  Hum Mol Genet       Date:  1993-12       Impact factor: 6.150

9.  Aniridia and deafness: an inherited disorder.

Authors:  R G Courteney-Harris; R P Mills
Journal:  J Laryngol Otol       Date:  1990-05       Impact factor: 1.469

Review 10.  Pax6: more than meets the eye.

Authors:  I Hanson; V Van Heyningen
Journal:  Trends Genet       Date:  1995-07       Impact factor: 11.639

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Authors:  Linda M Reis; Elena V Semina
Journal:  Curr Opin Ophthalmol       Date:  2011-09       Impact factor: 3.761

2.  Absence of mutations in four genes encoding for congenital cataract and expressed in the human brain in Tunisian families with cataract and mental retardation.

Authors:  Manèl Chograni; Myriam Chaabouni; Faouzi Mâazoul; Hedi Bouzid; Abdelhafid Kraiem; Habiba B Bouhamed Chaabouni
Journal:  BMC Ophthalmol       Date:  2011-11-21       Impact factor: 2.209

3.  PAX6 analysis of one family and one sporadic patient from southern China with classic aniridia.

Authors:  Ying Lin; Xialin Liu; Xuanwei Liang; Baoxin Li; Shuhong Jiang; Shaobi Ye; Huiqin Yang; Bingsheng Lou; Yizhi Liu
Journal:  Mol Vis       Date:  2011-11-26       Impact factor: 2.367

4.  Molecular analysis of the PAX6 gene for congenital aniridia in the Korean population: identification of four novel mutations.

Authors:  Shin Hae Park; Man Soo Kim; Hyojin Chae; Yonggoo Kim; Myungshin Kim
Journal:  Mol Vis       Date:  2012-02-19       Impact factor: 2.367

5.  A recurrent PAX6 mutation is associated with aniridia and congenital progressive cataract in a Chinese family.

Authors:  Chongfei Jin; Qiwei Wang; Jinyu Li; Yanan Zhu; Xingchao Shentu; Ke Yao
Journal:  Mol Vis       Date:  2012-02-16       Impact factor: 2.367

6.  Mutation analysis of PAX6 in inherited and sporadic aniridia from northeastern China.

Authors:  Yang Kang; Ying Lin; Xue Li; Qiong Wu; Lei Huang; Qingjun Li; Qi Hu
Journal:  Mol Vis       Date:  2012-06-27       Impact factor: 2.367

7.  Molecular analysis of the PAX6 gene for aniridia and congenital cataracts in Tunisian families.

Authors:  Manèl Chograni; Kaouther Derouiche; Myriam Chaabouni; Imen Lariani; Habiba Chaabouni Bouhamed
Journal:  Hum Genome Var       Date:  2014-09-04

8.  Nonsense suppression induced readthrough of a novel PAX6 mutation in patient-derived cells of congenital aniridia.

Authors:  Xiaoliang Liu; Yuanyuan Zhang; Bijun Zhang; Haiming Gao; Chuang Qiu
Journal:  Mol Genet Genomic Med       Date:  2020-03-03       Impact factor: 2.183

Review 9.  The genetic architecture of aniridia and Gillespie syndrome.

Authors:  Hildegard Nikki Hall; Kathleen A Williamson; David R FitzPatrick
Journal:  Hum Genet       Date:  2018-09-22       Impact factor: 4.132

10.  Longitudinal genotype-phenotype analysis in 86 patients with PAX6-related aniridia.

Authors:  Vivienne Kit; Dulce Lima Cunha; Ahmed M Hagag; Mariya Moosajee
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