| Literature DB >> 32411380 |
Raheela Nadeem1, Firoz Kabir2, Jiali Li3,4, Libe Gradstein3, Xiaodong Jiao3, Bushra Rauf1, Muhammad Asif Naeem1, Muhammad Zaman Assir5, Sheikh Riazuddin1,5, Radha Ayyagari6, J Fielding Hejtmancik3, S Amer Riazuddin2.
Abstract
This study was conducted to identify the genetic basis of retinal dystrophies in consanguineous Pakistani families. We recruited two families with retinitis pigmentosa (RP) displaying visual difficulties, including nyctalopia and constricted visual fields. Linkage analysis and Sanger sequencing resulted in the identification of a previously reported nonsense mutation, c.847C > T, in exon 5 of CERKL in one family and a novel four-base pair deletion in exon 4 of RP1, c.delAGAA4218_4221, leading to premature protein termination in the second family. Here, we report two RP-causing mutations extending the genetic heterogeneity of the disease.Entities:
Keywords: Genetic linkage study; Genetic markers
Year: 2020 PMID: 32411380 PMCID: PMC7217820 DOI: 10.1038/s41439-020-0100-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Genome Var ISSN: 2054-345X
Fig. 1Fundus photographs of individuals examined for retinitis pigmentosa.
a, b Fundus photographs (OD and OS, respectively) of individual 8 from family PKRP373 show attenuated arterioles and some optic disk pallor, as well as pronounced atrophy of the central retina (the macula) and atrophy around the optic disc. c, d The normally appearing fundus of unaffected individual 7 from family PKRP373 (OD and OS, respectively) including the macula and optic disc. e, f Fundus photographs of individual 10 from family PKRP388 (OD and OS, respectively) demonstrate vascular attenuation, marked optic disc pallor, bone-spicule pigmentation, and degenerative changes in the peripheral and central retina. g, h) The normal fundus of unaffected individual 12 from family PKRP388 (OD and OS, respectively) showing a normal caliber of retinal vessels, no signs of retinal pigmentation, and a normally appearing optic disc. OD Oculus Dextrus (right eye); OS Oculus Sinister (left eye).
Fig. 2Electroretinography recordings of individuals examined for retinitis pigmentosa.
Stimulus conditions: scotopic 0 dB bright flashes elicit rod responses, and photopic 0 dB and 30 Hz flickers elicit cone responses. For each individual, recording traces correspond to the following (from left to right): scotopic response OD, scotopic response OS, photopic response OD, and photopic response OS; two recordings from each eye were obtained under most conditions (1 and 2, green, and red traces, respectively). a Affected individual 8 of family PKRP373 exhibited nondetectable electroretinography responses (trace 1 on the second from the left plate is an artifact). b Affected individual 7 of family PKRP388 also showed extinguished responses under all conditions. c Normal responses were seen in an ethnically matched, unaffected individual. OD Oculus Dextrus (right eye); OS Oculus Sinister (left eye).