| Literature DB >> 34440414 |
Saoud Al-Khuzaei1,2, Suzanne Broadgate2, Charlotte R Foster3, Mital Shah1, Jing Yu2, Susan M Downes1,2, Stephanie Halford2.
Abstract
Stargardt disease (STGD1) and ABCA4 retinopathies (ABCA4R) are caused by pathogenic variants in the ABCA4 gene inherited in an autosomal recessive manner. The gene encodes an importer flippase protein that prevents the build-up of vitamin A derivatives that are toxic to the RPE. Diagnosing ABCA4R is complex due to its phenotypic variability and the presence of other inherited retinal dystrophy phenocopies. ABCA4 is a large gene, comprising 50 exons; to date > 2000 variants have been described. These include missense, nonsense, splicing, structural, and deep intronic variants. Missense variants account for the majority of variants in ABCA4. However, in a significant proportion of patients with an ABCA4R phenotype, a second variant in ABCA4 is not identified. This could be due to the presence of yet unknown variants, or hypomorphic alleles being incorrectly classified as benign, or the possibility that the disease is caused by a variant in another gene. This underlines the importance of accurate genetic testing. The pathogenicity of novel variants can be predicted using in silico programs, but these rely on databases that are not ethnically diverse, thus highlighting the need for studies in differing populations. Functional studies in vitro are useful towards assessing protein function but do not directly measure the flippase activity. Obtaining an accurate molecular diagnosis is becoming increasingly more important as targeted therapeutic options become available; these include pharmacological, gene-based, and cell replacement-based therapies. The aim of this review is to provide an update on the current status of genotyping in ABCA4 and the status of the therapeutic approaches being investigated.Entities:
Keywords: ABCA4; ABCA4-associated retinopathies; Stargardt disease; genetic testing; phenocopies
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34440414 PMCID: PMC8392661 DOI: 10.3390/genes12081241
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.096
Figure 1Colour fundus photographs: (A) foveal atrophy surrounded by a minimal amount of flecks; and (B) widespread flecks that would be consistent with a fundus flavimaculatus phenotype.
Figure 2Schematic diagram of the structure of the ABCA4 protein showing the two transmembrane domains (TMD), the nucleotide-binding domains (NBD), and exocytoplasmic domains (ECD) that contain N-linked oligosaccharide chains and the C-terminal VFVNFA motif. Adapted from [33,37,38]. Created with BioRender.com (accessed on 1 June 2021).
Figure 3Schematic diagram illustrating the visual cycle in the photoreceptor outer segments and the RPE. (A) Light photobleaches the opsin and isomerises the 11-cis-retinal to ATR. Some ATR reversibly reacts with PE to form NrPE, which is flipped onto the cytoplasmic side by the ABCA4 protein. The NrPE is then hydrolysed to PE and ATR, thus preventing the accumulation of ATR on the luminal side. The ATR is then reduced to all-trans-retinol by RDH8 and then transported to the RPE cell by IRBP. In the RPE, the all-trans-retinol is esterified to all-trans-retinyl esters by LRAT, which is then converted to 11-cis-retinol by RPE65 isomerohydrolase and then oxidized to 11-cis-retinal by RDH and transported back to the photoreceptors by IRBP. (B) Schematic diagram illustrating the visual cycle in the presence of ABCA4 dysfunction. Dysfunction of the ABCA4 protein prevents the flipping of the NrPE from the luminal side to the cytoplasmic side of the photoreceptor outer segments, meaning that the NrPE accumulates and condenses with all-trans-retinal into A2PE. The photoreceptor outer segments are then shed and phagocytosed by the RPE cell, which then hydrolyse the A2PE to A2E [56]. Created with BioRender.com (accessed on 1 June 2021). Abbreviations: ATR: All-trans-retinal; A2E: N-retinyl-N-retinylidene ethanolamine; A2PE phosphatidyl-pyridinium bisretinoid; IRBP: inter photoreceptor binding protein; LRAT: lecithin retinol acyltransferase, NrPE: N-retinylidene phosphatidylethanolamine; PE: phosphatidylethanolamine; RDH8: retinol dehydrogenase 8; RPE: retinal pigment epithelial.
Figure 4Schematic diagram of the ABCA4 protein actively transporting NrPE from the luminal side of the photoreceptor disc membrane to the cytoplasmic side. The ADP is initially bound to the NBD and the ABCA4 binds the NrPE on the luminal side of the photoreceptor disc membrane; this is followed by binding of ATP to the NBDs, leading to a conformational change that creates a low affinity binding site on the cytoplasmic side, resulting in dissociation of the NrPE from the ABCA4 protein and followed by hydrolysis of the ATP, returning the ABCA4 to its primary conformation. Adapted from Molday et al. [37]. Created with BioRender.com (accessed on 1 June 2021). Abbreviations: NBD: nuclear binding domain; NrPE: N-retinylidene phosphatidylethanolamine.
A summary of the ABCA4 phenocopies.
| Phenocopy | Disease | Inheritance pattern | Associated phenotypes | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| STGD2 and STGD3 | Autosomal dominant | Macular pigmentary changes and flecks | [ |
|
| STGD4 | Autosomal dominant | Cone-rod dystrophy | [ |
|
| Pattern dystrophy | Autosomal dominant | Pattern dystrophy | [ |
|
| Cone-rod dystrophy | Autosomal dominant | BEM | [ |
|
| Bestrophinopathies | Autosomal recessive | Widespread vitelliform flecks in autosomal recessive | [ |
|
| Macular dystrophy | Autosomal recessive | Juvenile onset macular dystrophy with associated hyptrichosis of scalp hair | [ |
| Hydroxychloroquine retinopathy | Bull’s eye maculopathy | Drug toxicity | Bull’s eye maculopathy | [ |
The detection rate of ABCA4 variants in patients with an STGD1 phenotype in different populations.
| Population | Reference | |
|---|---|---|
| Canada (isolated population Newfoundland) | 93% | [ |
| Chinese | 61–84% | [ |
| Polish | 79% | [ |
| Danish | 77% | [ |
| Portuguese | 76% | [ |
| Spain | 76% | [ |
| Germany | 74% | [ |
| Mexico | 74% | [ |
| USA | 50–75% | [ |
| Hungarian | 65.7% | [ |
| South Africa | 62% | [ |
| Canadian | 59% | [ |
| French Canadian | 33% | [ |
Figure 5Schematic diagram illustrating the correlation between the amount of functional ABCA4 protein and the phenotype based on early studies that predicted that a lower amount of functioning ABCA4 protein was associated with more severe phenotypes. Figure adapted from Maugeri et al. [53].
The three genotype severity classifications described by Fujinami et al. and the proportion of patients with each of these severities [104,154].
| Description | Proportion of ProgStar cohort | Proportion in Adult Cohort with Age of Onset >17 Years [ | Proportion in Paediatric Cohort with Age of Onset <17 years [ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | Two or more severe or null variants | 5.7% | 1.6% | 20.6% |
| B | One severe/null variant and at least one missense or in frame deletion insertion | 44.4% | 40.6% | 44.1% |
| C | Two or more missense or in frame insertion/deletion variants | 49.8% | 54.7% | 35.2% |
Summary of the classification criteria used by Cornelis at al. to decide the genotype severity [148].
| Class | Description | Pathogenicity |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Truncating variant | Pathogenic |
| 2 | Non-truncating but enriched in | Likely pathogenic |
| 3 | Non-truncating variant that is more frequent in the | Uncertain significance |
| 4 | Variant had higher frequency in nFE ExAc control group than | Likely benign |
| 5 | Variant has a frequency > 0.005 in nFE ExAC population and not a known mild | Benign |
A summary of the severity classification of the variants described by Curtis et al. [161].
| Class | ABCA4 Expression | Basal ATPase Activity | Stimulation by N-Ret-PE |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Significantly reduced | <50% | Not stimulated |
| 2 | Partial reduction | 50–80% | Modestly stimulated |
| 3 | Comparable to WT | Comparable to WT | Comparable to WT |
A summary of the current pharmacological therapeutic studies in ABCA4.
| Therapy | Mechanism of action | Result | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Deuterated vitamin A | Vitamin A is deuterated at the carbon 20 position which strengthens the bond to the retinaldehyde-PE Schiff base which slows the production of A2E production and also provides more time for the Schiff base to be returned to the visual cycle | Decreased A2E Decreased ATR dimer Decreased lipofuscin Decreased autofluorescence signal Improvement in electrodiagnostic testing Results awaited | [ |
| RBP4 antagonists | Retinol binding protein 4 antagonists inhibit the binding of all- | Fenretidine in Decreased A2E Decreased AF Decreased lipofuscin Possibly better antagonist than fenretidine | [ |
| Emixustat hydrochloride | Emixustat hydrochloride inhibits the RPE65 protein which reduces 11- | Decrease A2E Decreased lipofuscin AF “Dose related suppression of rod b wave amplitude recovery post photobleaching” | [ |
| 4-methylpyrazole | Inhibits alcohol dehydrogenase | Humans No published results on the treated STGD1 patients | |
| Isotretinoin | Inhibits 11- | In Decreased A2E Decreased lipofuscin Delayed dark adaptation Protect photoreceptors from phototoxicity | [ |
| Saffron | Counteract oxidative damage through the carotenoid constituents crocins and crocetin | Shown to be safe in a double-blind placebo-controlled trial | [ |
| VX-809 | Increase expression of ABCA4 protein in cells containing the p.(Ala1038Val) and p. (Gly1961Glu) variants | Increased expression of ABCA4 protein in HEK293T cells | [ |
| Amine containing drugs | Sequesters all-trans-retinal by reacting with the aldehyde group and forming an inactive Schiff-base and those that compete with PE thus preventing A2E production | [ | |
| Ticagrelor | Exposure to A2E increases the lysosomal pH which affects degeneration of the photoreceptors. Ticagrlor targets this by inhibiting the P2Y12 receptor to lower the lysosomal pH. | Thicker outer nuclear layer Decreased AF Improved a and b wave responses on EDT Reduced lysosomal pH Higher LAMP1 expression (meaning improved lysosomal function) | [ |
| Soraprazan | Reversible fast acting inhibitor H+, K+ ATPase that was noted to decrease lipofuscin deposits. | Decreased lipofuscin in RPE in treated monkeys and mice | [ |
| Zimura® | Target C5 complement pathway to prevent formation of the membrane attack complex thus reducing cell death following activation of the complement pathway by A2E and bistretinoids | Results of Phase IIb study awaited | [ |
| Omega 3 fatty acid supplementation | Omega 3 fatty acids are thought to be important for general retinal function | Trial results awaited |
|
| Docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) supplementation | DHA normally has a high concentration in the retina and is important towards retinal function | A trial showed no improvement in retinal function | [ |