| Literature DB >> 22025892 |
Arif O Khan1, Mohammed A Aldahmesh, Fowzan S Alkuraya.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To clinically and genetically characterize a distinct phenotype of congenital megalocornea (horizontal corneal diameter ≥13 mm) with secondary glaucoma from spherophakia and/or ectopia lentis during childhood in affected Saudi families.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22025892 PMCID: PMC3198484
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Vis ISSN: 1090-0535 Impact factor: 2.367
Figure 1Pedigrees of the families. The pedigrees for Family 1 (A), Family 2 (B), and Family 3 (C) are shown. Pt: patient; by hx: affected by history but not available for the study.
Clinical summary.
| 1 | 1 | M | 2y | megalocornea, lens subluxation | acute lens-related pupillary block glaucoma several months after referral |
| 2 | 1 | M | 1y | megalocornea, lens subluxation | glaucoma surgery followed by lens luxation, retinal detachment, and phthisis |
| 3 | 2 | M | 4m | nystagmus, megalocornea, spherophakia | lens subluxation (4y), acute lens-related pupillary block glaucoma (6y) |
| 4 | 2 | M | 4y | megalocornea, spherophakia, lens-related pupillary block glaucoma | stable after lensectomy and anterior vitrectomy |
| 5 | 3 | M | 1.5y | megalocornea, lens subluxation, acute lens-related pupillary block glaucoma | stable after lensectomy and anterior vitrectomy |
| 6 | 3 | M | 6m | megalocorrnea, spherophakia | acute lens-related pupillary block glaucoma 1year after referral |
| 7 | 3 | M | 2y | records not available – multiple surgeries | phthisis |
| 8 | 3 | F | 10y | megalocornea, lens subluxation | lenses eventually luxated posteriorly and surgery not done, has glaucoma at age 20y |
M: male; F: female; Original referral: age at time of original referral; y: years old; m: months old.
Figure 2Family 1: cousin of the proband. A: At one year of age, large corneas are evident (14 mm horizontal diameters) but without corneal haze/scarring or Descemet breaks. B: After primary Ahmed valve implantation in both eyes, the crystalline lens dislocated into the posterior chamber and retinal tears developed bilaterally. The right eye is shown.
Figure 3Family 2: two affected brothers. A: At six years of age, the proband developed right acute pupillary block glaucoma. Complete crystalline lens dislocation into the anterior chamber of the right eye can be seen. In the left eye, inferotemporal crystalline lens subluxation can be appreciated. Both corneas are symmetrically enlarged (14 mm horizontal diameter). B, C: The proband's brother had lens-related pupillary block glaucoma in the left eye for which he had bilateral lensectomy and anterior vitrectomy at four years of age. At ten years of age, glaucomatous cupping in the left eye (C) as opposed to the right eye (B) can be appreciated. Megalocornea (not shown) was symmetric (14 mm horizontal corneal diameters without scars or breaks).
Figure 4Family 3: two affected brothers, affected paternal aunt. A: At one and one-half year of age, the proband developed left acute pupillary block glaucoma. Complete crystalline lens dislocation into the anterior chamber of the left eye and a large corneal diameter (14 mm horizontally) can be seen. B: The proband's six-month-old brother was tentatively scheduled for primary congenital glaucoma surgery by his physician. Megalocornea is evident (14 mm horizontal diameter without breaks or scarring). The child also had bilateral spherophakia (not shown). C: The paternal aunt of the proband had been diagnosed with glaucoma at ten years of age but never had surgery. At 20 years old, bilateral symmetric megalocornea (14 mm horizontal diameter without breaks or scarring) is evident. Both crystalline lenses were posteriorly dislocated (not shown). She had high intraocular pressure, angle synechiae, and glaucomatous optic nerve damage in her right eye (not shown).
LTBP2 primers.
| 1a | CCCAGAGCAGGAGAAAGG | GGAACAGACTGTACACCTTGG |
| 1b | GCCCCCTAGACTCAGAGAAG | AATCTTCCAATCCCGATTTT |
| 2 | AATGGCAGAGTCAGGATTCA | CTTCAGGACGCAGACTAGGA |
| 3 | CTGAGGCCAGGAGAGTGG | CCAGCCCCAACACCTACT |
| 4 | AAGCCTGGTGATTCCACATA | CACAAAGCAGGTGCTCAAC |
| 5 | GCGTCCAGTAGGTACTCAGC | AGCTAGGCTGCCAAGTGAG |
| 6 | GGGGCTGGTTATTATCCACT | GGCTGAGAAGTTGAGGGAAT |
| 7 | GGGATCATTCTGGGGTTCTA | CTGTGTGCCTGGTATTGACA |
| 8 | ACTCCCTTCTCCCCTTCTTT | ACAGACTGCACCAGCAGAG |
| 9 | GCTGAGAGGAGTCTGGTGAG | TGGCTTCCTCTGTCACTCTC |
| 10 | GGAGAGGAATCCCACTGAAT | ATCTCTGTTCCAGCAGGATG |
| 11 | ATTCCACTACGCCTCTTCCT | GCAGGGAAGGCTACTTCAG |
| 12 | ACGTGCTTATCCCAACCTG | TCTTGACCCCATATGGAAGA |
| 13 | AAGAGTCCACGCTTTCTGTG | ATGGCTGCTCCATAAACAAG |
| 14 | GTAAAGTGCCTGGCAGAATG | GGTGTATAGAGAGCTCCCAGAA |
| 15 | TTAGACTGGATGTGCTCCAAC | AGAGGGACCCTGTGTTCTTT |
| 16 | CCCCTAGGGTCTTATGCAAG | GAGACTGGTCTTCCCCTGAA |
| 17 | CCCACTGGGCTGACTTTAT | AGGCTGGAGTTCTGGTCTCT |
| 18 | GGGCCTGAGCTAGATCATTT | AAGGGCTCAGGAATTCTCAT |
| 19 | GGCAGCTCTCATTCTTTCCT | TGAATATGGCCAAAGAGGAG |
| 20–21 | CATGCAGAGTGCTCTGAGTTAC | GGTCCATTTATGGGGTCTTC |
| 22 | TTCTAGGGAGGGGGTTTTAG | AAGCTTGTGAGCGACTCTTG |
| 23–24 | CCCAAGAGTCGCTCACAA | ACTCCTCGCTCCCATCTTC |
| 25 | CGAGCCTTTTCCTACATAAGC | CAGCACGAAGATGATGATTG |
| 26–27 | GGAATAGATCAAGAACCCCAGA | CTTCTTTGAAGCCTCCCTTG |
| 28 | TCTGTCCATTGGTTCCTCCT | TGTAGCTCCTGGTTTTGCTG |
| 29–30 | GGCCACTTCTTAGGGTTGTG | ACAGAAAAGGTGGAGGCAAC |
| 31 | GTAGGAACCGGAGGCAAG | CCTGGGGACAATCTCTGAC |
| 32–33 | GTGGGCTGTCAGAGATTGTC | CTACTTTGTCCCCAAACAGC |
| 34 | ATCTCCCAGAGGGTACCAGT | CCTGGGCGTATGTACTTGTC |
| 35 | TCCACAAGAATTTTATGATCCTC | TTGTCTTTTGTCTGGGAACC |
| 36 | TGTCCTTGAGTTGCTTGGTT | TCAGGATGATGGTGGATTGT |
Figure 5Genetic analysis. A, B, C: Sequencing of LTPB2 revealed a novel homozygous mutation in each family that segregated with the phenotypes.
Conservation analysis of Family 3 mutation c.4313G>A).
| Human | A | G | G | T | C | C | E | A | Q |
| Mouse | A | G | G | T | C | C | E | A | Q |
| Dog | A | G | G | T | C | C | E | A | Q |
| Elephant | A | G | G | T | C | C | E | A | Q |
| Opossum | A | G | G | T | C | C | E | E | R |
| Chicken | A | G | V | T | C | C | E | Q | K |
| X_tropicalis | E | G | I | S | C | C | E | D | R |
| Zebrafish | Q | G | A | T | C | C | E | Q | L |
Data from Multiz Alignment (UCSC Human Genome Browser) showing high level of conservation of C1438 across species.
LTBP2 mutations to date.
| 1 | Pakistani | c.412delG | 1 | p.A138PfsX278 | diagnosed as primary congenital glaucoma | [ |
| 2 | Pakistani | c.331C>T | 1 | p.Q111X | diagnosed as primary congenital glaucoma | [ |
| 3 | Pakistani | c.1243_1256del14 | 6 | p.E415RfsX596 | diagnosed as primary congenital glaucoma | [ |
| 4a | Gypsy | c.895C>T | 4 | p.R299X | diagnosed as primary congenital glaucoma | [ |
| 4b | Macedonian | c.895C>T | 4 | p.R299X | primary megalocornea & spherophakia | [ |
| 5 | Iranian | c.1415delC | 7 | p.S472fsX3 | diagnosed as primary congenital glaucoma | [ |
| 6 | Iranian | c.5376delC | 36 | p.Y1793fsX55 | diagnosed as primary congenital glaucoma | [ |
| 7 | Moroccan | c.1796dupC | 9 | p.V600GfsX2 | primary megalocornea & secondary lens-related glaucoma | [ |
| 8 | South Indian | c.5446dupC | 36 | p.H1816PfsX28 | spherophakia | [ |
| 9 | Saudi | c.1012delT | 4 | p.S338fsX4 | primary megalocornea & secondary lens-related glaucoma | current study |
| 10 | Saudi | c.4855C>T | 33 | p.Q1619X | primary megalocornea & secondary lens-related glaucoma | current study |
| 11 | Saudi | c.4313G>A | 29 | p.C1438Y | primary megalocornea & secondary lens-related glaucoma | current study |