| Literature DB >> 33243271 |
Vanita Berry1,2, Alex Ionides3, Nikolas Pontikos4,3, Michalis Georgiou4,3, Jing Yu5, Louise A Ocaka6, Anthony T Moore3,7, Roy A Quinlan8, Michel Michaelides9,10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The crystalline lens is mainly composed of a large family of soluble proteins called the crystallins, which are responsible for its development, growth, transparency and refractive index. Disease-causing sequence variants in the crystallins are responsible for nearly 50% of all non-syndromic inherited congenital cataracts, as well as causing cataract associated with other diseases, including myopathies. To date, more than 300 crystallin sequence variants causing cataract have been identified.Entities:
Keywords: Autosomal dominant congenital cataract; Crystallins; Next generation sequencing
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33243271 PMCID: PMC7691105 DOI: 10.1186/s13023-020-01613-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Fig. 1Frequency pie charts showing spectrum of cataract-causing crystallin variants. Total number of 308 disease-causing variants to date (novel and recurrent) are shown in 13 crystallins expressed in lens. (https://cat-map.wustl.edu/)
Fig. 2Structural view of Crystallins: (https://swissmodel.expasy.org/repository/uniprot/) a CRYAA—wild-type and missense mutant amino acid at position 49 (Arginine); b CRYBA1—wild-type and indel mutant amino acid at position 91(Glycine); cCRYGD wild-type and mutant stop codon at amino acid position 157 (Tryptophan); d CRYGC—wild-type and mutant frame-shift variant at amino acid position 60 (Arginine); e CRYBB1—wild-type and mutant stop codon amino acid at position 219 (Tryptophan); f CRYGD–wild-type and mutant stop codon amino acid at 131 (Tryptophan); g CRYAA—wild-type and mutant indel variant at amino acid position 152 (Alanine); h CRYBB1—wild-type and mutant stop codon amino acid at 206 (Tyrosine); i CRYGC—wild-type and missense mutant amino acid at position 5 (Threonine) and j CRYGD—wild-type and mutant stop codon amino acid at 140 (Arginine)
Crystallin disease-causing variants implicated in ADCC families/isolated cases in present study
| Family | Variant | Gene | HGVSc | HGVSp | Phenotype | CADD | GERP | Mutation taster/verdict |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | c.145C>T | R49C | Nuclear/lamellar | 32.00 | 4.88 | Disease causing-0.81/likely pathogenic/recurrent | ||
| B | c.272delGAG | G91del | Nuclear | 19.47 | 5.88 | Disease causing-0.81/pathogenic/recurrent | ||
| C | W157* | Pulverulent | 39.00 | 4.25 | Disease causing-0.81/pathogenic/recurrent | |||
| D | c.179delG | R60Qfs*43 | Nuclear | 32.00 | 4.98 | Disease causing-0.81/pathogenic/novel | ||
| E | c.656G>A | W219* | Lamellar | 43.00 | 4.21 | Disease causing-0.81/pathogenic/novel | ||
| F | c.392G>A | W131* | Nuclear | 40.00 | 4.25 | Disease causing-0.81/pathogenic/novel | ||
| G | c.454delGCC | A152del | Congenital cataract | 15.18 | 3.78 | Disease causing-0.81/likely pathogenic/novel | ||
| H | c.618C>A | Y206* | Congenital cataract | 38.00 | 4.21 | Disease causing-0.81/pathogenic/novel | ||
| I | c.13A>C | T5P | Congenital cataract | 24.80 | 4.96 | Disease causing-0.81/likely pathogenic/recurrent | ||
| J | c.418C>T | R140* | Nuclear cataract | 36.00 | 4.25 | Disease causing-0.81/pathogenic/recurrent |
CADD combined annotation dependent depletion, GERP genomic evolutionary rate profiling
Fig. 3a Family A: Abridged pedigree with nuclear cataract; b Family B: Abridged pedigree with nuclear cataract; c Family C: Abridged pedigree with pulverulent cataract; d Family D: Abridged pedigree with nuclear cataract; e Family E: Abridged pedigree with lamellar cataract. The diagonal line indicates a deceased family member. Squares and circles symbolize males and females, respectively. Open and filled symbols indicate unaffected and affected individuals, respectively. The arrow indicates the family members who participated in the WES analysis. All the members available in the family were sequenced to show the segregation
Fig. 4Sequence analysis of Crystallin variants: a CRYAA –wild type and missense variant c.145C>T in unaffected and affected member of family—A with nuclear cataract; b CRYBA1—an indel variant at c.272delG in an affected member of family B with nuclear cataract; c CRYGD—wild type in unaffected and stop codon variant c.470G>A in affected member of family—C with pulverulent cataract; d CRYGC—a frameshift mutation at c.179delG is shown in the affected member of family-D with nuclear cataract; e CRYBB1—a stop codon variant c.656G>A in an affected member of family-E with lamellar cataract; f CRYGD– mutant stop codon amino acid at c.392G>A in an affected female with nuclear cataract; g CRYAA—a mutant indel variant at c.454delG in affected male with congenital cataract and (G1) CRYGA—another missense novel disease-causing variant of uncertain significance at c.118A>T in the same individual G; h CRYBB1—a stop codon mutation at c.618C>A in affected female with congenital cataract; i CRYGC—a missense variant at c.13A>C in an affected male with congenital cataract and j CRYGD a stop codon variant at c.418C>T in an affected female with nuclear cataract
Fig. 5a The multiple-sequence alignments from different vertebrate species. Arrows show conserved arginine at p.R49 and alanine at p.A152 in CRYAA protein (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/nuccore/?term); b The multiple-sequence alignments from different vertebrate species. Arrows show conserved tryptophan at p.W131, p.W157 and arginine at p.R140. in CRYGD protein (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/nuccore/?term=Homo+sapiens+CRYGD); c The multiple-sequence alignments from different vertebrate species. Arrows show conserved tyrosine at p,Y206 and tryptophan at p.W219 in CRYBB1 protein (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/nuccore/?term=human+CRYBB1); d The multiple-sequence alignments from different vertebrate species. Arrows show conserved threonine at p,T5 and arginine at p.R60 in CRYGC protein (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/nuccore/?term=human+CRYGC); e The multiple-sequence alignments from different vertebrate species. Arrows show conserved glycine at p. in CRYBA1 protein (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/nuccore/?term=human+CRYBA1)