| Literature DB >> 34206500 |
Angelo Maria Minnella1,2, Roberta Rissotto3, Elena Antoniazzi4, Marco Di Girolamo5, Marco Luigetti6,7, Martina Maceroni1, Daniela Bacherini8, Benedetto Falsini1,2, Stanislao Rizzo1,2, Laura Obici9.
Abstract
The term amyloidosis describes a group of rare diseases caused by protein conformation abnormalities resulting in extracellular deposition and accumulation of insoluble fibrillar aggregates. So far, 36 amyloid precursor proteins have been identified, and each one is responsible for a specific disease entity. Transthyretin amyloidosis (ATTRv) is one of the most common forms of systemic and ocular amyloidosis, due to the deposition of transthyretin (TTR), which is a transport protein mainly synthesized in the liver but also in the retinal pigment epithelial cells. ATTRv amyloidosis may be misdiagnosed with several other conditions, resulting in a significant diagnostic delay. Gelsolin and keratoepithelin are other proteins that, when mutated, are responsible for a systemic amyloid disease with significant ocular manifestations that not infrequently appear before systemic involvement. The main signs of ocular amyloid deposition are in the cornea, irido-corneal angle and vitreous, causing complications related to vasculopathy and neuropathy at the local level. This review aims at describing the main biochemical, histopathological and clinical features of systemic amyloidosis associated with eye involvement, with particular emphasis on the inherited forms. We discuss currently available treatments, focusing on ocular involvement and specific ophthalmologic management and highlighting the importance of a prompt treatment for the potential sight-threatening complications derived from amyloid deposition in ocular tissues.Entities:
Keywords: ATTR; amyloid; amyloidosis; corneal lattice dystrophy; gelsolin; keratoepithelin; ocular amyloidosis; personalized medicine; transthyretin; vitrectomy; vitreous opacities
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34206500 PMCID: PMC8304974 DOI: 10.3390/genes12070955
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.096
Amyloid fibril proteins and their precursors involved in eye diseases.
| Fibril Protein | Precursor Protein | Systemic and/or Localized | Acquired or Hereditary | Target Organs |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AL | Immunoglobulin light chain | S,L | A,H | All organs, usually except CNS |
| AH | Immunoglobulin heavy chain | S,L | A | All organs except CNS |
| AA | (Apo) Serum amyloid A | S | A | All organs except CNS |
| ATTR | Transthyretin, wild type | S | A | Heart mainly in males, Lung, Ligaments, Tenosynovium |
| Transthyretin, variants | S | H | PNS, ANS, heart, eye, leptomeninges | |
| AGel | Gelsolin, variants | S | H | PNS, cornea |
| AKer | Keratoepithelin | L | A,H | Cornea |
| ALac | Lactoferrin | L | A | Cornea |
AL, amyloid light chain; AH, amyloid heavy chain; AA, serum amyloid A protein; ATTR, transthyretin amyloid protein; AGel, gelsolin amyloid protein; Aker, keratoepithelin amyloid protein; ALac, lactoferrin amyloid protein; S, systemic; L, localized; A, acquired; H, hereditary; CNS, central nervous system; PNS, peripheral nervous system; ANS, autonomic nervous system. Partially modified from [6].
Figure 1Clinical manifestations in ATTRv patients.
Figure 2Phenotypic heterogeneity according to genotype.
Figure 3Biochemical mechanisms leading to amyloidosis formation.
Figure 4Sural nerve biopsy from a late onset ATTRv patient. H&E showing abundant eosinophilic deposits suggestive of amyloid.
Mutations associated with ocular involvement according to www.amyloidosismutations.com [32].
| Mutation | |
|---|---|
| Cys10Arg [ | Leu55Gln [ |
| Ser23Asn [ | Leu55Arg [ |
| Val30Met [ | Leu55Pro [ |
| Val30Gly [ | Leu58Arg [ |
| Phe33Cys [ | Phe64Ser [ |
| Phe33Ile [ | Tyr69His [ |
| Arg34Gly [ | Lys70Asn [ |
| Lys35Thr [ | Val71Ala [ |
| Ala36Pro [ | Gly83Arg [ |
| Trp41Leu [ | Ile84Asn [ |
| Thr49Ala [ | Ile84Ser [ |
| Gly53Ala [ | Ala97Ser [ |
| Glu54Gly [ | Tyr114Cys [ |
| Glu54Lys [ | Val122Ala [ |
Figure 5Classical appearance of retrolental vitreous amyloid opacities in ocular TTR amyloidosis examined by slit-lamp examination: multiple sheet-like, cobweb-like and glass wool-like fibrils are present (magnification 16×).
Figure 6Fundus ophthalmoscopic examination before (a) and after (b) vitreoretinal surgery (50-degree angle of view).
Figure 7Slit-lamp examination showing areas with altered fluorescein distribution (BUT < 10 sec) and localized fluorescein staining (arrow) in amyloidosis patients (magnification 10× and diffuse illumination).
Figure 8Poorly represented corneal nervous plexa with corneal confocal microscopy in amyloidosis.
Figure 9Slit-lamp examination of pupillary indentations considered as a pathognomonic sign of ocular amyloidosis caused by amyloid deposition at the inner pupillary margin (magnification 10× and diffuse illumination).
Figure 10Steps of amyloid formation and corresponding therapeutic strategies. Modified from: Recent advances in transthyretin amyloidosis therapy, Mitsuharu Ueda and Yukio Ando [8].
Figure 11Slit-lamp examination of corneal lattice dystrophy in amyloidotic patients (magnification 16×).