| Literature DB >> 33138239 |
Saoud Al-Khuzaei1, Suzanne Broadgate2, Stephanie Halford2, Jasleen K Jolly1,2, Morag Shanks3, Penny Clouston3, Susan M Downes1,2.
Abstract
A retrospective review of the clinical records of patients seen at the Oxford Eye Hospital identified as having NR2E3 mutations was performed. The data included symptoms, best-corrected visual acuity, multimodal retinal imaging, visual fields and electrophysiology testing. Three participants were identified with biallelic NR2E3 pathogenic sequence variants detected using a targeted NGS gene panel, two of which were novel. Participant I was a Nepalese male aged 68 years, and participants II and III were white Caucasian females aged 69 and 10 years old, respectively. All three had childhood onset nyctalopia, a progressive decrease in central vision, and visual field loss. Patients I and III had photopsia, patient II had photosensitivity and patient III also had photophobia. Visual acuities in patients I and II were preserved even into the seventh decade, with the worst visual acuity measured at 6/36. Visual field constriction was severe in participant I, less so in II, and fields were full to bright targets targets in participant III. Electrophysiology testing in all three demonstrated loss of rod function. The three patients share some of the typical distinctive features of NR2E3 retinopathies, as well as a novel clinical observation of foveal ellipsoid thickening.Entities:
Keywords: Goldmann–Favre syndrome; NR2E3; autosomal recessive and autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa; ellipsoid zone; enhanced S-cone syndrome; inherited retinal degeneration; pigmentary clumping; retinal dystrophy
Year: 2020 PMID: 33138239 PMCID: PMC7716234 DOI: 10.3390/genes11111288
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.096
Figure 1Schematic diagram of NR2E3 genomic locus, structure of the encoded protein and location of identified mutations. The top panel shows the NR2E3 gene on 15q23 which consists of 8 exons and spans approximately 7.7 kb of genomic DNA. Exons are shown as boxes and introns as lines; all are to scale. The middle panel shows which domains each exon contributes to the protein structure. The gene encodes a predicted 410 amino acid protein which shows the characteristic structure of a nuclear hormone receptor (lower panel) and consists of 5 domains: the N-terminal A/B domain (regions 1 and 2, shown in dark blue), a DNA binding domain (light grey) which contains 2 Zn-fingers (region 3, dark grey), a hinge region (region 4, green) and the ligand binding domain at the C-terminal end (region 5, light blue). The position of the β-sheets, α-helices and the activator function region 2 are also shown (in red, blue and darker blue, respectively). The positions of the mutations described in this report are also shown. Figure adapted from Mollena et al. [22].
Summary of NR2E3 variants identified.
| Patient | Variant | Protein | Genotype | Position | Location | gnomAD | PolyPhen2 | SIFT | Original Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| c.226C > T | p.R76W | Het | Exon 2 | chr15: 72103930 | 0 | D | D | [ |
| c.1048C > G | p.Q350E | Het | Exon 7 | chr15: 72106406 | 0 | D | D | Novel | |
|
| c.119-2A > C | Splicing | Hom | Intron 1 | chr15: 72103821 | 0.0005 | n/a | n/a | [ |
|
| c.119-2A > C | Splicing | Het | Intron 1 | chr15: 72103821 | 0.0005 | n/a | n/a | [ |
| c.639_640insT | p.P214SfsX39 | Het | Exon 5 | chr15: 72104744 | 0.000004 | n/a | n/a | Novel |
Chromosome position is based on build GRCh37/hg19; nucleotide and protein numbering is based on NR2E3 transcript NM_014249.3; Genome Aggregation Database, gnomAD; MAF, minor allele frequency; gnomAD, Polyphen, and SIFT were accessed on 1 September 2019. Polyphen predictions range from zero to one and variants are appraised qualitatively as benign (B) (0.00–0.15), possibly damaging (P) (0.16–0.85), or probably damaging (D) (0.86–1.00). SIFT results are reported to be tolerant (T) if tolerance index > 0.05 or intolerant (damaging (D)) if tolerance ≤0.05. Novel variants identified in this study are shaded.
Figure 2Family trees and colour imaging, fundus autofluorescence (FAF), and spectral domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT) imaging of patients I, II and III. The top panel shows the pedigrees of each family, the arrow indicates the proband. (A) Imaging of Patient I showing a dense concentric band of pigment and atrophy, extending from the arcades into the mid peripheral retina (i,ii); increased autofluorescence signal at both maculae (iii,iv), and central preservation of the retina on optical coherence tomography (v,vi). (B) Imaging of Patient II showing concentric pigment clumping in the mid peripheral retina that is more pronounced in the temporal and nasal regions (i,ii); mildly increased AF at both maculae and decreased AF extending from the vascular arcades into the midperiphery (iii,iv); significant focal thickening at the fovea in the ellipsoid zone (EZ) and, in the right eye, an incipient lamellar hole (v,vi). (C) Imaging of patient III shows a concentric band of atrophy, pigment, and white dots extending from the arcades into the mid peripheral retina (i,ii); with an increased autofluorescence signal at both maculae (iii,iv), and central preservation of the retina on optical coherence tomography (v,vi). (vii–viii) in each panel are OCT images with segmentation highlighting the ganglion cell layer in purple and the inner plexiform layer in blue (see Supplementary Table S2 for measurements).
Clinical information.
| Patient | Gender | Ethnic Origin | First Symptoms (and Age at Diagnosis) | Age of Last Examination (Years) | Symptoms at Last Review & Presence of Cataract | Best Corrected VA | Fundus | OCT | Autofluorescence | Visual Field | ERG | Variant |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| M | Nepalese | Night blindness since childhood diagnosed | 66 | Nyctalopia, blurred central vision, photopsia | 6/18 RE | Ring of dense pigment with atrophy surrounding and including the arcades extending to the mid periphery; sparing maculae and peripheral retinas | Central preservation of the retina with loss of the EZ temporal to macula, vitreomacular traction OD | Annulus of decreased signal consistent with coalescing atrophy extending from and including the arcades to the mid-periphery and increased signal disturbance within both maculae | Severely constricted field to all isopters 12e below threshold in both eyes | Severe widespread rod, cone, macular and RPE dysfunction with residual S cone response | c.226C>T |
|
| F | White Caucasian | Night blindness (lifelong) | 69 | Abnormal colour vision, poor contrast, mild photosensitivity | 6/36+1 RE | Clumped pigmentary deposition extending from, and including the vascular arcades into the mid periphery, with far peripheral atrophy | Disrupted fovea, with thickened EZ and IZ | Increased AF at the maculae and at the arcades with decreased patchy AF in the areas of atrophy in the mid periphery | Partial ring scotoma to V4e stimulus with infratemporal sparing, central scotoma to III.4e in both eyes | PERG was almost extinguished. Both rods and cones were grossly affected, with a similarly reduced and delayed response to standard flash under both scotopic and photopic conditions | c.119-2A>C |
|
| F | White Caucasian | Nyctalopia, photophobia and photopsias | 16 | Nyctalopia, photophobia, photopsias | 6/5 RE | Band of atrophy and white punctate dots in mid-peripheral retina circumferential to the macula | Central preservation of the retina | Increased AF at both maculae with a brighter ring internal to arcades, patchy reduction in signal mapping to the atrophic patches | Ring scotoma to 1.4e stimulus with central 10 degree island. Preserved fields bilaterally to large targets | Relatively well preserved PERG | c.119-2A>C |
AF, autofluorescence; ERG, electroretinogram; EOG, electrooculogram; EZ, ellipsoid zone; IZ, interdigitation zone; LE, left eye; OCT, optical coherence tomography; PERG, pattern electroretinogram; RE, right eye; VA, visual acuity.
Figure 3Electrophysiology results for patients compared to a control eye. Patient 1 has widespread loss in all systems with residual S-cone response. Patient 2 has extinguished rod, reduced cone but large S-cone responses. Patient 3 has reduced responses affecting rods more than cones. DA 0.01 is the dark-adapted rod response, and DA 10 is the dark adapted maximal response. At DA 10, both the single flash response and oscillatory potentials are shown. LA 30 Hz is light adapted 30 Hz flicker response and LA 3 is the light adapted standard flash as per International Society of Electrophysiology of Vision (ISCEV) guidelines. The S-cone response isolates the S-cone response using a blue flash. The pattern electroretinogram (PERG) reflects macular function.