| Literature DB >> 29460221 |
Anna Wawrocka1, Maciej R Krawczynski2,3.
Abstract
Aniridia is a rare, panocular disorder characterized by a variable degree of hypoplasia or the absence of iris tissue associated with additional ocular abnormalities. It is inherited in an autosomal dominant manner, with high penetrance and variable expression even within the same family. In most cases the disease is caused by haploinsufficiency truncating mutations in the PAX6 gene; however, in up to 30% of aniridia patients, disease results from chromosomal rearrangements at the 11p13 region. The aim of this review is to present the clinical and genetic aspects of the disease. Furthermore, we present a molecular diagnostic strategy in the aniridia patients. Recent improvement in the genetic diagnostic approach will precisely diagnosis aniridia patients, which is essential especially for children with aniridia in order to determine the risk of developing a Wilms tumor or neurodevelopmental disorder. Finally, based on the previous studies we describe the current knowledge and latest research findings in the topic of pathogenesis of aniridia and possible future treatment.Entities:
Keywords: 11p13 microdeletions; Aniridia; High-resolution array-CGH; MLPA; PAX6
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29460221 PMCID: PMC5895662 DOI: 10.1007/s13353-017-0426-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Appl Genet ISSN: 1234-1983 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig. 1A typical phenotype of a complete aniridia with polar posterior cataract (white arrow) and peripheral iris remnants (black arrow)
Fig. 2The PAX6 cDNA, horizontal rectangles represent PAX6 protein domains including: PD-paired domain, LNK-linker region, HD-homeodomain, PST-proline/serine/threonine rich region. Exon 5a is an alternatively spliced exon in the PD domain. The most frequent mutations in the PAX6 gene described in LOVD database are presented above the diagram
Deletions in the 11p13 region, downstream of the PAX6 gene reported previously in the literature
| Deleted genes (whole or partially) | Distance from the 3′ of | Genomic coordinates (hg19) | Size of deletion | Phenotype | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
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| 22.1 kb | ND | 975 kb | aniridia | (Lauderdale et al. |
|
| 11.6 kb | ND | 1105 kb | aniridia | |
|
| 5 kb | ND | ND | aniridia, cataracts, glaucoma | (D’Elia et al. |
|
| 35 kb | chr11:30,448,178-31,802,357 | 1.3 Mb | aniridia, autism, mental retardation | (Davis et al. |
|
| 140 kb | chr11:31,260,340-31,666,340 | 406 kb | aniridia | (Bayrakli et al. |
|
| 123 kb | chr11:31,117,827-31,683,687 | 566 kb | aniridia | (Cheng et al. |
|
| 1 kb | chr11:31,280,628-31,805,329 | 525 kb | aniridia | (Zhang et al. |
|
| 85 kb | chr11:31,122,161-31,721,030 | 599-652 kb | partial aniridia | (Wawrocka et al. |
|
| 8 kb | chr11:31,706,160-31,755,245 bp | 49 kb | aniridia, developmental delay, a submucous cleft palate, ventriculoseptal defect | Simoni et al. |
|
| 96 kb | chr11:31,118,027-31,710,576 | 593 kb | Rieger anomaly, aniridia | (Addis et al. |
|
| 31 kb | chr11:31,172,410-31,775,457 | 603 kb | aniridia | |
|
| 23 kb | chr11:31,605,859-31,783,590 | 178 kb | partial aniridia | |
|
| 108 kb | chr11:30,918,066-31,698,257 | 780 kb | aniridia | (Ansari et al. |
|
| 59 kb | chr11:31,010,424-31,747,424 | 737 kb | aniridia | |
|
| 113 kb | chr11:31,152,003-31,693,266 | 541 kb | aniridia | |
|
| 54 kb | chr11:31,422,424-31,751,424 | 329 kb | aniridia | |
|
| 11 kb | chr11:31,277,819-31,795,239 | 517 kb | partial aniridia, ataxia, developmental delay | |
|
| 91 kb | chr11:31,147,306-31,714,853 | 567 kb | aniridia | (Blanco-Kelly et al. |
|
| 108 kb | chr11:31,186,493-31,698,208 | 512 kb | aniridia | |
|
| 101 kb | chr11:31,083,877-31,704,548 | 620 kb | aniridia | |
|
| |||||
|
| 114 kb | chr11:31,010,914-31,692,238 | 681 kb | ocular coloboma | (Guo et al. |
|
| 191 kb | chr11:31,452,082-31,615,319 | 163 kb | intellectual disability, speech abnormalities, autistic behaviors | (Balay et al. |
|
| 242 kb | chr11:30,991,456-31,564,708 | 573 kb | focal epilepsy with cortical dysplasia, mild developmental delay, ADHD, neurinomas, squint, ptosis, fine motor dyspraxia | |
|
| 260 kb | chr11:31,495,260-31,546,276 | 51 kb | cognitive delay, speech and language disorder, reading and spelling disorder, ASD, epilepsy | |
|
| 181 kb | chr11:31,561,220-31,625,448 | 64 kb | speech and language delay | |
|
| 132 kb | chr11:31,573,422-31,674,789 | 101 kb | developmental delay, microcephaly | |
|
| 164 kb | chr11:31,584,329-31,642,325 | 58 kb | language disorder, behavioral problems | |
|
| 174 kb | chr11:31,601,768-31,632,347 | 31 kb | developmental delay, hypotonia, ventriculomegaly | (Addis et al. |
|
| 84 kb | chr11:31,691,270-31,722,740 | 31 kb | developmental delay, speech and language disorder, microcephaly, mild cognitive delay, motor skills development disorder | |
|
| 59 kb | chr11:31,705,076-31,747,631 | 43 kb | autism, learning difficulties | |
|
| 20 kb | chr11:31,760,904-31,786,914 | 26 kb | moderate developmental delay, autism | |
|
| 4 kb | chr11:31,597,322-31,802,120 | 205 kb | severe intellectual disability, muscle hypotrophy, severe dysphagia, craniofacial abnormalities | |
|
| 31 kb | chr11:31,605,859-31,775,457 | 170 kb | developmental delay, behavioral problems, pervasive developmental disorder | |
|
| 31 kb | chr11:31,625,389-31,775,457 | 150 kb | behavioral and speech problems, mild mental retardation | |
|
| 151 kb | chr11:31,460,506-31,655,108 | 195 kb | autism | |
|
| 199 kb | chr11:31,488,890-31,607,986 | 119 kb | autism | (Addis et al. |
|
| 157 kb | chr11:31,518,924-31,649,475 | 131 kb | autism, language delay | |
|
| 76 kb | chr11:31,576,768-31,653,568 | 77 kb | autism, coordination problems | |
|
| 112 kb | chr11:31,652,219-31,764,393 | 112 kb | autism, language delay, mild developmental delay, motor delay | |
ND – no data, ASD – autism spectrum disorder, ADHD – attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
Fig. 3Schematic diagram of the previously reported microdeletions in the 11p13 region, downstream of the PAX6 gene in the aniridia patients. Horizontal blue blocks represent deletions that have been identified in the aniridia patients. The vertical blue dashed lines indicate the “critical region” required for the PAX6 gene transcription suggested by Ansari et al. 2016