| Literature DB >> 31452356 |
Wei Li1,2, Ziwei Wang1, Yan Sun2,3, Zhuoshi Wang2,3, Jinyue Bai4, Bo Xing4, Xiao Sun4, Lusheng Wang2,5, Jiankang Li2,5, Wei He2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Familial exudative vitreoretinopathy (FEVR) is a severe clinically and genetically heterogeneous retinal disorder characterized with failure of vascular development of the peripheral retina. The symptoms of FEVR vary widely among patients in the same family, and even between the two eyes of a given patient. The purpose of this study was to investigate the molecular mechanisms by which the start codon mutation of the TSPAN12 causes difference in clinical manifestations between individuals in the same family.Entities:
Keywords: Familial exudative vitreoretinopathy; clinical heterogeneous manifestations; fundus fluorescein angiography; start codon mutation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31452356 PMCID: PMC6785457 DOI: 10.1002/mgg3.948
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Genet Genomic Med ISSN: 2324-9269 Impact factor: 2.183
Figure 1Pedigrees of the families with mutations. Squares indicate men and circles women; black and white symbols represent affected and unaffected individuals, respectively. The proband is marked with an arrow, the dotted symbols indicate carried a mutation of c.1A>G in TSPAN12. The asterisks indicate those members enrolled in this study
Figure 2Subject IV‐1: (a, c, e) represent left eye, (b, d, f) represent right eye. B‐ultrasound, respectively, shows the scattered light spot in the vitreous cavity of the right eye, the eyeball wall of the temporal disc is not smooth, and the short light band in front of the nipple; the denser light spot in the vitreous cavity of the left eye, and the thick light echo from the nipple to the front (e, f)
Figure 3Subject III‐1: (a, b) represent right eye; (c, d) represent left eye. Fluorescein fundus angiography showed normal appearance of the posterior pole and peripheral retinal vessels of the right eye and left eye of the proband's father (III‐1), respectively; Subject III III‐2: (e, f) represent right eye; (g, h) represent left eye. (e, g) Respectively showed that the mother (III‐2) of the proband had normal fundus of the posterior pole of the right eye and the left eye. (f, h) Respectively showed that the mother of the proband had abnormal manifestations of peripheral retinal vessels in the right eye and left eye. Fluorescent fundus angiography showed no perfusion area in the peripheral retina, and fluorescence leakage appeared in the peripheral blood vessels of the retina
Summary of deleteriousness prediction methods analyzed mutation c.1A>G of TSPAN12 in our study
| Name | Category | Score | Deleterious threshold | Information used |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SIFT | Function prediction | 0 | <0.05 | Protein sequence conservation among homologs |
| PhyloP | Conservation score | 3.243 | >1.6 | DNA sequence conservation |
| FATHMM | Function prediction | 4.56 | ≥0.45 | Sequence homology |
| PolyPhen−2 HDIV | Function prediction | 0.993 | >0.5 | Eight protein sequence features, three protein structure features |
| PolyPhen−2 HVAR | Function prediction | 0.971 | >0.5 | Eight protein sequence features, three protein structure features |
| MutationTaster | Function prediction | 1 | >0.5 | DNA sequence conservation, splice site prediction, mRNA stability prediction and protein feature annotations |
Figure 4Multiple sequence alignment of start codon mutations from different species to explore the conservation of these mutations. As shown in (a), the red arrow represents mutation sites. To evaluate the influences of mutations in tetraspanin‐12, the simulation program SWISS‐MODEL was used to predict the 3‐D structure of both the mutant and wild‐type proteins. As shown in (b and c), we observed a difference between the structure of the mutated and wild‐type in tetraspanin‐12, red arrow indicates a truncated protein structure change, which resulted in a functional abnormality change