| Literature DB >> 33668843 |
Kate E Leahy1,2, Tom Wright2,3, Monika K Grudzinska Pechhacker1,2, Isabelle Audo4,5,6, Anupreet Tumber1, Erika Tavares7, Heather MacDonald1,8,9, Jeff Locke1, Cynthia VandenHoven1, Christina Zeitz4, Elise Heon1,2,7, J Raymond Buncic1,2, Ajoy Vincent1,2,7.
Abstract
Hemizygous pathogenic variants in CACNA1F lead to defective signal transmission from retinal photoreceptors to bipolar cells and cause incomplete congenital stationary night blindness in humans. Although the primary defect is at the terminal end of first-order neurons (photoreceptors), there is limited knowledge of higher-order neuronal changes (inner retinal) in this disorder. This study aimed to investigate inner retinal changes in CACNA1F-retinopathy by analyzing macular ganglion cell layer-inner plexiform layer (GCL-IPL) thickness and optic disc pallor in 22 subjects with molecularly confirmed CACNA1F-retinopathy. Detailed ocular phenotypic data including distance and color vision, refraction and electroretinogram (ERG) were collected. Distance vision was universally reduced (mean: 0.42 LogMAR), six had abnormal color vision and myopia was common (n = 15; mean: -6.32 diopters). Mean GCL-IPL thickness was significantly lower in patients (55.00 µm) compared to age-matched controls (n = 87; 84.57 µm; p << 0.001). The GCL-IPL thickness correlated with scotopic standard (p = 0.04) and bright-flash (p = 0.014) ERG b/a ratios and photopic b-wave amplitudes (p = 0.05). Twenty-one patients had some degree of disc pallor (bilateral in 19). Fifteen putative disease-causing, including five novel variants were identified. This study establishes macular inner retinal thinning and optic atrophy as characteristic features of CACNA1F-retinopathy, which are independent of myopia and could impact potential future treatment strategies.Entities:
Keywords: CACNA1F; calcium channels/genetics; electroretinography; eye diseases; hereditary; myopia; night blindness/congenital; optic atrophy; optical coherence; retinal bipolar cells; retinal ganglion cells; tomography
Year: 2021 PMID: 33668843 PMCID: PMC7996180 DOI: 10.3390/genes12030330
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.096