| Literature DB >> 27157923 |
Mandeep S Singh1,2, Suzanne Broadgate1, Ranjana Mathur3, Richard Holt1, Stephanie Halford1, Robert E MacLaren1,4,2.
Abstract
Hypotrichosis with juvenile macular dystrophy (HJMD) is an autosomal recessive disorder that causes childhood visual impairment. HJMD is caused by mutations in CDH3 which encodes cadherin-3, a protein expressed in retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) cells that may have a key role in intercellular adhesion. We present a case of HJMD and analyse its phenotypic and molecular characteristics to assess the potential for retinal gene therapy as a means of preventing severe visual loss in this condition. Longitudinal in vivo imaging of the retina showed the relative anatomical preservation of the macula, which suggested the presence of a therapeutic window for gene augmentation therapy to preserve visual acuity. The coding sequence of CDH3 fits within the packaging limit of recombinant adeno-associated virus vectors that have been shown to be safe in clinical trials and can efficiently target RPE cells. This report expands the number of reported cases of HJMD and highlights the phenotypic characteristics to consider when selecting candidates for retinal gene therapy.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27157923 PMCID: PMC4860587 DOI: 10.1038/srep23674
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) The patient had sparse and short hair. (b,c) Hypopigmented areas (arrowheads in b) of retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cells and small foveal pigment clumps (arrow in c) were present bilaterally. (d,e) Foveal autofluorescence was reduced, reflecting loss of RPE cells. (f) Spectral domain optical coherence tomography (SDOCT) imaging showed preserved right foveal center thickness (downward arrowhead). A small hyperintense deposit corresponding to a pigment clump occupies the subretinal space approximately 440 μm nasal to the foveal center (arrow). (g) SDOCT in the left fovea showing preserved foveal center thickness. A small outer retinal tubulation approximately 1050 μm nasal to the fovea (arrow) indicated localised photoreceptor loss. (h,i) Three years later, there were more advanced degenerative changes. (j) SDOCT of the right eye three years post baseline showing focal photoreceptor loss (arrow) and subretinal pigment epithelium scar (arrowhead), but relative preservation of the central foveal thickness (magnified in l, arrowhead). (k) SDOCT of the left eye three years post baseline, with focal ONL loss (arrows) outside the foveal center. (m) Magnified view of the right foveal center from (k) showing preserved central foveal thickness (arrowhead) and the presence of the subfoveal RPE temporal to the black arrowhead. The arrow denotes focal photoreceptor loss outside the foveal center. The inner segment/outer segment (IS/OS) line at the foveal center is absent in both (l,m).
Figure 2(a) Schematic diagram of the genomic structure of CDH3. Exons are depicted as boxes and introns as lines; all are to scale except for regions of intronic DNA larger than 1kb that are represented as slashed lines. Exon and intron sizes are marked, as are the start (ATG) and stop (TAG) codons. The exons encoding the calcium binding domains are shaded in blue. Arrows mark the approximate position of the intronic primers used for PCR of exon 13. (b) Sequence of the intron 12/exon13 boundary in a control sample and the patient, a homozygous change in intron 12 (c.1796-2A>G) is seen in the case (arrowhead). Dotted lines mark the intron-exon boundary. Intronic sequences are shown in lower case lettering. (c) Schematic diagram of the 2490bp CDH3 mRNA. The arrows mark the approximate position of the exonic primers used for PCR in exon 11 and exon 15. (d) The sequence obtained from the PCR fragment obtained from cDNA, providing confirmation that the base change shown in (a) results in a product that was missing exon 13 in the patient. The exon 12/exon 13 and exon 13/exon 14 boundaries in a control is shown alongside the sequence obtained in the patient, where exon 12 is spliced directly to exon 14. Dotted lines mark the exon boundaries.