Literature DB >> 23946133

Screening of a large cohort of leber congenital amaurosis and retinitis pigmentosa patients identifies novel LCA5 mutations and new genotype-phenotype correlations.

Donna S Mackay1, Arundhati Dev Borman1,2, Frans P M Cremers3, Anthony T Moore1,2, Robert K Koenekoop4, Ruifang Sui5, L Ingeborgh van den Born6, Eliot L Berson7, Louise A Ocaka1, Alice E Davidson1, John R Heckenlively8, Kari Branham8, Huanan Ren4, Irma Lopez4, Maleeha Maria3,9, Maleeha Azam3,9, Arjen Henkes3, Ellen Blokland3, Raheel Qamar9,10, Andrew R Webster1,2, Sten Andreasson1, Elfride de Baere1, Jean Bennett1, Gerald J Chader1, Wolfgang Berger1, Irina Golovleva1, Jacquie Greenberg1, Anneke I den Hollander1, Caroline C W Klaver1, B Jeroen Klevering1, Birgit Lorenz1, Markus N Preising1, Raj Ramsear1, Lisa Roberts1, Ronald Roepman1, Klaus Rohrschneider1, Bernd Wissinger1.   

Abstract

This study was undertaken to investigate the prevalence of sequence variants in LCA5 in patients with Leber congenital amaurosis (LCA), early-onset retinal dystrophy (EORD), and autosomal recessive retinitis pigmentosa (arRP); to delineate the ocular phenotypes; and to provide an overview of all published LCA5 variants in an online database. Patients underwent standard ophthalmic evaluations after providing informed consent. In selected patients, optical coherence tomography (OCT) and fundus autofluorescence imaging were possible. DNA samples from 797 unrelated patients with LCA and 211 with the various types of retinitis pigmentosa (RP) were screened by Sanger sequence analysis of all LCA5 exons and intron/exon junctions. Some LCA patients were prescreened by APEX technology or selected based on homozygosity mapping. In silico analyses were performed to assess the pathogenicity of the variants. Segregation analysis was performed where possible. Published and novel LCA5 variants were collected, amended for their correct nomenclature, and listed in a Leiden Open Variation Database (LOVD). Sequence analysis identified 18 new probands with 19 different LCA5 variants. Seventeen of the 19 LCA5 variants were novel. Except for two missense variants and one splice site variant, all variants were protein-truncating mutations. Most patients expressed a severe phenotype, typical of LCA. However, some LCA subjects had better vision and intact inner segment/outer segment (IS/OS) junctions on OCT imaging. In two families with LCA5 variants, the phenotype was more compatible with EORD with affected individuals displaying preserved islands of retinal pigment epithelium. One of the families with a milder phenotype harbored a homozygous splice site mutation; a second family was found to have a combination of a stop mutation and a missense mutation. This is the largest LCA5 study to date. We sequenced 1,008 patients (797 with LCA, 211 with arRP) and identified 18 probands with LCA5 mutations. Mutations in LCA5 are a rare cause of childhood retinal dystrophy accounting for ∼2% of disease in this cohort, and the majority of LCA5 mutations are likely null. The LCA5 protein truncating mutations are predominantly associated with LCA. However, in two families with the milder EORD, the LCA5 gene analysis revealed a homozygous splice site mutation in one and a stop mutation in combination with a missense mutation in a second family, suggesting that this milder phenotype is due to residual function of lebercilin and expanding the currently known phenotypic spectrum to include the milder early onset RP. Some patients have remaining foveal cone structures (intact IS/OS junctions on OCT imaging) and remaining visual acuities, which may bode well for upcoming treatment trials.
© 2013 WILEY PERIODICALS, INC.

Entities:  

Keywords:  LCA; LCA5; RP; blindness; lebercilin; retinal dystrophy

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23946133      PMCID: PMC4337959          DOI: 10.1002/humu.22398

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hum Mutat        ISSN: 1059-7794            Impact factor:   4.878


  50 in total

1.  Null RPGRIP1 alleles in patients with Leber congenital amaurosis.

Authors:  T P Dryja; S M Adams; J L Grimsby; T L McGee; D H Hong; T Li; S Andréasson; E L Berson
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  2001-03-29       Impact factor: 11.025

2.  Leber congenital amaurosis and retinitis pigmentosa with Coats-like exudative vasculopathy are associated with mutations in the crumbs homologue 1 (CRB1) gene.

Authors:  A I den Hollander; J R Heckenlively; L I van den Born; Y J de Kok; S D van der Velde-Visser; U Kellner; B Jurklies; M J van Schooneveld; A Blankenagel; K Rohrschneider; B Wissinger; J R Cruysberg; A F Deutman; H G Brunner; E Apfelstedt-Sylla; C B Hoyng; F P Cremers
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  2001-05-24       Impact factor: 11.025

3.  A novel locus for Leber congenital amaurosis maps to chromosome 6q.

Authors:  S Dharmaraj; Y Li; J M Robitaille; E Silva; D Zhu; T N Mitchell; L P Maltby; A B Baffoe-Bonnie; I H Maumenee
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  2000-01       Impact factor: 11.025

4.  Progression of phenotype in Leber's congenital amaurosis with a mutation at the LCA5 locus.

Authors:  M D Mohamed; N C Topping; H Jafri; Y Raashed; M A McKibbin; C F Inglehearn
Journal:  Br J Ophthalmol       Date:  2003-04       Impact factor: 4.638

5.  Mutations in a new photoreceptor-pineal gene on 17p cause Leber congenital amaurosis.

Authors:  M M Sohocki; S J Bowne; L S Sullivan; S Blackshaw; C L Cepko; A M Payne; S S Bhattacharya; S Khaliq; S Qasim Mehdi; D G Birch; W R Harrison; F F Elder; J R Heckenlively; S P Daiger
Journal:  Nat Genet       Date:  2000-01       Impact factor: 38.330

6.  Preserved para-arteriole retinal pigment epithelium (PPRPE) in retinitis pigmentosa.

Authors:  J R Heckenlively
Journal:  Br J Ophthalmol       Date:  1982-01       Impact factor: 4.638

7.  Mutations in MERTK, the human orthologue of the RCS rat retinal dystrophy gene, cause retinitis pigmentosa.

Authors:  A Gal; Y Li; D A Thompson; J Weir; U Orth; S G Jacobson; E Apfelstedt-Sylla; D Vollrath
Journal:  Nat Genet       Date:  2000-11       Impact factor: 38.330

8.  Mutations in the gene encoding lecithin retinol acyltransferase are associated with early-onset severe retinal dystrophy.

Authors:  D A Thompson; Y Li; C L McHenry; T J Carlson; X Ding; P A Sieving; E Apfelstedt-Sylla; A Gal
Journal:  Nat Genet       Date:  2001-06       Impact factor: 38.330

9.  Mutations in RDH12 encoding a photoreceptor cell retinol dehydrogenase cause childhood-onset severe retinal dystrophy.

Authors:  Andreas R Janecke; Debra A Thompson; Gerd Utermann; Christian Becker; Christian A Hübner; Eduard Schmid; Christina L McHenry; Anita R Nair; Franz Rüschendorf; John Heckenlively; Bernd Wissinger; Peter Nürnberg; Andreas Gal
Journal:  Nat Genet       Date:  2004-07-18       Impact factor: 38.330

10.  Leber congenital amaurosis: comprehensive survey of the genetic heterogeneity, refinement of the clinical definition, and genotype-phenotype correlations as a strategy for molecular diagnosis.

Authors:  Sylvain Hanein; Isabelle Perrault; Sylvie Gerber; Gaëlle Tanguy; Fabienne Barbet; Dominique Ducroq; Patrick Calvas; Hélène Dollfus; Christian Hamel; Tuija Lopponen; Francis Munier; Louisa Santos; Stavit Shalev; Dimitrios Zafeiriou; Jean-Louis Dufier; Arnold Munnich; Jean-Michel Rozet; Josseline Kaplan
Journal:  Hum Mutat       Date:  2004-04       Impact factor: 4.878

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1.  Comprehensive Molecular Diagnosis of a Large Chinese Leber Congenital Amaurosis Cohort.

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2.  Amelioration of Neurosensory Structure and Function in Animal and Cellular Models of a Congenital Blindness.

Authors:  Ji Yun Song; Puya Aravand; Sergei Nikonov; Lanfranco Leo; Arkady Lyubarsky; Jeannette L Bennicelli; Jieyan Pan; Zhangyong Wei; Ivan Shpylchak; Pamela Herrera; Daniel J Bennett; Nicoletta Commins; Albert M Maguire; Jennifer Pham; Anneke I den Hollander; Frans P M Cremers; Robert K Koenekoop; Ronald Roepman; Patsy Nishina; Shangzhen Zhou; Wei Pan; Gui-Shuang Ying; Tomas S Aleman; Jimmy de Melo; Ilan McNamara; Junwei Sun; Jason Mills; Jean Bennett
Journal:  Mol Ther       Date:  2018-03-21       Impact factor: 11.454

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Review 4.  Leber's Congenital Amaurosis: Current Concepts of Genotype-Phenotype Correlations.

Authors:  Chu-Hsuan Huang; Chung-May Yang; Chang-Hao Yang; Yu-Chih Hou; Ta-Ching Chen
Journal:  Genes (Basel)       Date:  2021-08-19       Impact factor: 4.096

5.  Clinical exome sequencing facilitates the understanding of genetic heterogeneity in Leber congenital amaurosis patients with variable phenotype in southern India.

Authors:  Sriee Viswarubhiny; Rupa Anjanamurthy; Ayyasamy Vanniarajan; Devarajan Bharanidharan; Vijayalakshmi Perumalsamy; Periasamy Sundaresan
Journal:  Eye Vis (Lond)       Date:  2021-05-06

6.  Next-generation sequencing applied to a large French cone and cone-rod dystrophy cohort: mutation spectrum and new genotype-phenotype correlation.

Authors:  Elise Boulanger-Scemama; Said El Shamieh; Vanessa Démontant; Christel Condroyer; Aline Antonio; Christelle Michiels; Fiona Boyard; Jean-Paul Saraiva; Mélanie Letexier; Eric Souied; Saddek Mohand-Saïd; José-Alain Sahel; Christina Zeitz; Isabelle Audo
Journal:  Orphanet J Rare Dis       Date:  2015-06-24       Impact factor: 4.123

7.  Homozygosity mapping and targeted sanger sequencing reveal genetic defects underlying inherited retinal disease in families from pakistan.

Authors:  Maleeha Maria; Muhammad Ajmal; Maleeha Azam; Nadia Khalida Waheed; Sorath Noorani Siddiqui; Bilal Mustafa; Humaira Ayub; Liaqat Ali; Shakeel Ahmad; Shazia Micheal; Alamdar Hussain; Syed Tahir Abbas Shah; Syeda Hafiza Benish Ali; Waqas Ahmed; Yar Muhammad Khan; Anneke I den Hollander; Lonneke Haer-Wigman; Rob W J Collin; Muhammad Imran Khan; Raheel Qamar; Frans P M Cremers
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-03-16       Impact factor: 3.240

8.  The genetic profile of Leber congenital amaurosis in an Australian cohort.

Authors:  Jennifer A Thompson; John N De Roach; Terri L McLaren; Hannah E Montgomery; Ling H Hoffmann; Isabella R Campbell; Fred K Chen; David A Mackey; Tina M Lamey
Journal:  Mol Genet Genomic Med       Date:  2017-08-22       Impact factor: 2.183

9.  Treatment Potential for LCA5-Associated Leber Congenital Amaurosis.

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10.  Next-generation Sequencing Extends the Phenotypic Spectrum for LCA5 Mutations: Novel LCA5 Mutations in Cone Dystrophy.

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