| Literature DB >> 9390563 |
C L Freund1, C Y Gregory-Evans, T Furukawa, M Papaioannou, J Looser, L Ploder, J Bellingham, D Ng, J A Herbrick, A Duncan, S W Scherer, L C Tsui, A Loutradis-Anagnostou, S G Jacobson, C L Cepko, S S Bhattacharya, R R McInnes.
Abstract
Genes associated with inherited retinal degeneration have been found to encode proteins required for phototransduction, metabolism, or structural support of photoreceptors. Here we show that mutations in a novel photoreceptor-specific homeodomain transcription factor gene (CRX) cause an autosomal dominant form of cone-rod dystrophy (adCRD) at the CORD2 locus on chromosome 19q13. In affected members of a CORD2-linked family, the highly conserved glutamic acid at the first position of the recognition helix is replaced by alanine (E80A). In another CRD family, a 1 bp deletion (E168 [delta1 bp]) within a novel sequence, the WSP motif, predicts truncation of the C-terminal 132 residues of CRX. Mutations in the CRX gene cause adCRD either by haploinsufficiency or by a dominant negative effect and demonstrate that CRX is essential for the maintenance of mammalian photoreceptors.Entities:
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Year: 1997 PMID: 9390563 DOI: 10.1016/s0092-8674(00)80440-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582