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A novel human CRYGD mutation in a juvenile autosomal dominant cataract

PURPOSE: Identification of causal mutation in the crystallin, connexin, and paired box gene 6 (PAX6) genes associated with childhood cataract in patients from India. METHODS: In this study, forty eight members from seventeen families and 148 sporadic cases of childhood cataract were evaluated. Clini...

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Autores principales: Roshan, Mascarenhas, Vijaya, Pai H., Lavanya, G. Rao, Shama, Prasada K., Santhiya, S.T., Graw, Jochen, Gopinath, P.M., Satyamoorthy, K.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Molecular Vision 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2875257/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20508808
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author Roshan, Mascarenhas
Vijaya, Pai H.
Lavanya, G. Rao
Shama, Prasada K.
Santhiya, S.T.
Graw, Jochen
Gopinath, P.M.
Satyamoorthy, K.
author_facet Roshan, Mascarenhas
Vijaya, Pai H.
Lavanya, G. Rao
Shama, Prasada K.
Santhiya, S.T.
Graw, Jochen
Gopinath, P.M.
Satyamoorthy, K.
author_sort Roshan, Mascarenhas
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: Identification of causal mutation in the crystallin, connexin, and paired box gene 6 (PAX6) genes associated with childhood cataract in patients from India. METHODS: In this study, forty eight members from seventeen families and 148 sporadic cases of childhood cataract were evaluated. Clinical and ophthalmologic examinations were performed on available affected and unaffected family members. Samples of genomic DNA were PCR amplified to screen for mutations in the candidate genes viz., alpha-A crystallin (CRYAA), beta- B2 crystallin (CRYBB2), gamma-A crystallin (CRYGA), gamma-B crystallin (CRYGB), gamma-C crystallin (CRYGC), gamma-D crystallin (CRYGD), gap junction alpha-3 (GJA3), gap junction alpha-8 (GJA8), and PAX6 based on polymerase chain reaction and single strand conformation polymorphism (PCR-SSCP) analysis. Samples showing any band mobility shift were subjected to bidirectional sequencing to confirm the variation. Co-segregation of the observed change with the disease phenotype was further tested by restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) for the appropriate restriction site. RESULTS: DNA sequencing analysis of CRYAA, CRYBB2, CRYGA-D, GJA3, GJA8, and PAX6 of the affected members of a family (C-35) showed a novel heterozygous missense mutation C>A at position 229 in CRYGD in three affected members of family C-35 with anterior polar coronary cataract. This variation C229A substitution created a novel restriction site for AluI and resulted in a substitution of highly conserved arginine at position 77 by serine (R77S). AluI restriction site analysis confirmed the transversion mutation. Analysis of the available unaffected members of the family (C-35) and 100 unrelated control subjects (200 chromosomes) of the same ethnic background did not show R77S variation. Data generated using ProtScale and PyMOL programs revealed that the mutation altered the stability and solvent-accessibility of the CRYGD protein. CONCLUSIONS: We describe here a family having anterior polar coronary cataract that co-segregates with the novel allele R77S of CRYGD in all the affected members. The same was found to be absent in the ethnically matched controls (n=100) studied. Interestingly the residue Arg has been frequently implicated in four missense (R15C, R15S, R37S, and R59H) and in one truncation mutation (R140X) of CRYGD. In two of the reported mutations Arg residues have been replaced with Serine. This finding further expands the mutation spectrum of CRYGD in association with childhood cataract and demonstrates a possible mechanism of cataractogenesis. Screening of other familial (n=48) and sporadic (n=148) cases of childhood cataract, did not reveal any previously reported or novel mutation in the candidate genes screened.
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spelling pubmed-28752572010-05-27 A novel human CRYGD mutation in a juvenile autosomal dominant cataract Roshan, Mascarenhas Vijaya, Pai H. Lavanya, G. Rao Shama, Prasada K. Santhiya, S.T. Graw, Jochen Gopinath, P.M. Satyamoorthy, K. Mol Vis Research Article PURPOSE: Identification of causal mutation in the crystallin, connexin, and paired box gene 6 (PAX6) genes associated with childhood cataract in patients from India. METHODS: In this study, forty eight members from seventeen families and 148 sporadic cases of childhood cataract were evaluated. Clinical and ophthalmologic examinations were performed on available affected and unaffected family members. Samples of genomic DNA were PCR amplified to screen for mutations in the candidate genes viz., alpha-A crystallin (CRYAA), beta- B2 crystallin (CRYBB2), gamma-A crystallin (CRYGA), gamma-B crystallin (CRYGB), gamma-C crystallin (CRYGC), gamma-D crystallin (CRYGD), gap junction alpha-3 (GJA3), gap junction alpha-8 (GJA8), and PAX6 based on polymerase chain reaction and single strand conformation polymorphism (PCR-SSCP) analysis. Samples showing any band mobility shift were subjected to bidirectional sequencing to confirm the variation. Co-segregation of the observed change with the disease phenotype was further tested by restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) for the appropriate restriction site. RESULTS: DNA sequencing analysis of CRYAA, CRYBB2, CRYGA-D, GJA3, GJA8, and PAX6 of the affected members of a family (C-35) showed a novel heterozygous missense mutation C>A at position 229 in CRYGD in three affected members of family C-35 with anterior polar coronary cataract. This variation C229A substitution created a novel restriction site for AluI and resulted in a substitution of highly conserved arginine at position 77 by serine (R77S). AluI restriction site analysis confirmed the transversion mutation. Analysis of the available unaffected members of the family (C-35) and 100 unrelated control subjects (200 chromosomes) of the same ethnic background did not show R77S variation. Data generated using ProtScale and PyMOL programs revealed that the mutation altered the stability and solvent-accessibility of the CRYGD protein. CONCLUSIONS: We describe here a family having anterior polar coronary cataract that co-segregates with the novel allele R77S of CRYGD in all the affected members. The same was found to be absent in the ethnically matched controls (n=100) studied. Interestingly the residue Arg has been frequently implicated in four missense (R15C, R15S, R37S, and R59H) and in one truncation mutation (R140X) of CRYGD. In two of the reported mutations Arg residues have been replaced with Serine. This finding further expands the mutation spectrum of CRYGD in association with childhood cataract and demonstrates a possible mechanism of cataractogenesis. Screening of other familial (n=48) and sporadic (n=148) cases of childhood cataract, did not reveal any previously reported or novel mutation in the candidate genes screened. Molecular Vision 2010-05-22 /pmc/articles/PMC2875257/ /pubmed/20508808 Text en Copyright © 2010 Molecular Vision. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Roshan, Mascarenhas
Vijaya, Pai H.
Lavanya, G. Rao
Shama, Prasada K.
Santhiya, S.T.
Graw, Jochen
Gopinath, P.M.
Satyamoorthy, K.
A novel human CRYGD mutation in a juvenile autosomal dominant cataract
title A novel human CRYGD mutation in a juvenile autosomal dominant cataract
title_full A novel human CRYGD mutation in a juvenile autosomal dominant cataract
title_fullStr A novel human CRYGD mutation in a juvenile autosomal dominant cataract
title_full_unstemmed A novel human CRYGD mutation in a juvenile autosomal dominant cataract
title_short A novel human CRYGD mutation in a juvenile autosomal dominant cataract
title_sort novel human crygd mutation in a juvenile autosomal dominant cataract
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2875257/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20508808
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