Cargando…

A deep intronic substitution in CNGB3 is one of the major causes of achromatopsia among Jewish patients

PURPOSE: Although most (or even all) genes that can cause achromatopsia (ACHM) when mutated are known, some patients are still negative for mutations even after screening the coding sequence of all known genes. Our aim was to characterize the genetic and clinical aspects of a deep intronic (c.1663–1...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Aweidah, Hamzah, Salameh, Manar, Yahalom, Claudia, Blumenfeld, Anat, Macarov, Michal, Weisschuh, Nicole, Kohl, Susanne, Banin, Eyal, Sharon, Dror
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Molecular Vision 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8477987/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34703197
_version_ 1784575959938105344
author Aweidah, Hamzah
Salameh, Manar
Yahalom, Claudia
Blumenfeld, Anat
Macarov, Michal
Weisschuh, Nicole
Kohl, Susanne
Banin, Eyal
Sharon, Dror
author_facet Aweidah, Hamzah
Salameh, Manar
Yahalom, Claudia
Blumenfeld, Anat
Macarov, Michal
Weisschuh, Nicole
Kohl, Susanne
Banin, Eyal
Sharon, Dror
author_sort Aweidah, Hamzah
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: Although most (or even all) genes that can cause achromatopsia (ACHM) when mutated are known, some patients are still negative for mutations even after screening the coding sequence of all known genes. Our aim was to characterize the genetic and clinical aspects of a deep intronic (c.1663–1205G>A, IVS14–1205G>A) CNGB3 variant. METHODS: Clinical evaluation included visual acuity testing, refractive error, a full clinical eye exam, full-field electroretinography (ffERG), color vision testing, and retinal imaging. Genetic analysis of CNGB3 exons, as well as part of intron 14, was performed by Sanger sequencing of PCR products. RESULTS: Screening for the CNGB3 c.1663–1205G>A variant revealed 17 patients belonging to 12 unrelated families who were either homozygous for this variant (7 cases, 5 families) or heterozygous in combination with another heterozygous known CNGB3 mutation (10 cases, 7 families). All patients were diagnosed with cone-dominated disease, mainly complete ACHM. In all cases, the disease had an early, congenital onset. Visual acuity was markedly impaired, ranging between 0.07 and 0.32 on the Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study (ETDRS) scale (logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution [LogMAR] +1.18 to +0.50), with a mean visual acuity of 0.15 ETDRS (LogMAR +0.80). Additional typical signs of ACHM, including impaired color vision, light aversion, and nystagmus, were also noted in all patients. As is common in ACHM, fundus exams were largely unremarkable in most patients, with mild foveal RPE changes seen in some cases at older ages. ERG was available for 14 out of 17 patients, and in all of them—including infants from the age of 6 months—cone responses were nondetectable. In a few cases, rod involvement was also evident, with a mild reduction of amplitudes. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) imaging showed irregularity of the ellipsoid zone in the foveal area in some patients. CONCLUSIONS: CNGB3 is the most common cause of ACHM in patients of European descent; this is mainly due to a panethnic founder mutation, c.1148del. Here, we report on an intronic CNGB3 variant that is more frequent than the c.1148del mutation in our cohort of Jewish patients. Among our ACHM cohort, 63.7% of patients had biallelic CNGA3 mutations and 26.4% had biallelic CNGB3 mutations. The phenotype of patients harboring the intronic mutation falls largely within the spectrum commonly seen in ACHM. Since gene therapy for CNGB3 is currently under investigation, these patients might benefit from this promising therapy. Given that this variant is not detectable by current commonly used genetic testing platforms, these patients could easily be missed.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8477987
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher Molecular Vision
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-84779872021-10-25 A deep intronic substitution in CNGB3 is one of the major causes of achromatopsia among Jewish patients Aweidah, Hamzah Salameh, Manar Yahalom, Claudia Blumenfeld, Anat Macarov, Michal Weisschuh, Nicole Kohl, Susanne Banin, Eyal Sharon, Dror Mol Vis Research Article PURPOSE: Although most (or even all) genes that can cause achromatopsia (ACHM) when mutated are known, some patients are still negative for mutations even after screening the coding sequence of all known genes. Our aim was to characterize the genetic and clinical aspects of a deep intronic (c.1663–1205G>A, IVS14–1205G>A) CNGB3 variant. METHODS: Clinical evaluation included visual acuity testing, refractive error, a full clinical eye exam, full-field electroretinography (ffERG), color vision testing, and retinal imaging. Genetic analysis of CNGB3 exons, as well as part of intron 14, was performed by Sanger sequencing of PCR products. RESULTS: Screening for the CNGB3 c.1663–1205G>A variant revealed 17 patients belonging to 12 unrelated families who were either homozygous for this variant (7 cases, 5 families) or heterozygous in combination with another heterozygous known CNGB3 mutation (10 cases, 7 families). All patients were diagnosed with cone-dominated disease, mainly complete ACHM. In all cases, the disease had an early, congenital onset. Visual acuity was markedly impaired, ranging between 0.07 and 0.32 on the Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study (ETDRS) scale (logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution [LogMAR] +1.18 to +0.50), with a mean visual acuity of 0.15 ETDRS (LogMAR +0.80). Additional typical signs of ACHM, including impaired color vision, light aversion, and nystagmus, were also noted in all patients. As is common in ACHM, fundus exams were largely unremarkable in most patients, with mild foveal RPE changes seen in some cases at older ages. ERG was available for 14 out of 17 patients, and in all of them—including infants from the age of 6 months—cone responses were nondetectable. In a few cases, rod involvement was also evident, with a mild reduction of amplitudes. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) imaging showed irregularity of the ellipsoid zone in the foveal area in some patients. CONCLUSIONS: CNGB3 is the most common cause of ACHM in patients of European descent; this is mainly due to a panethnic founder mutation, c.1148del. Here, we report on an intronic CNGB3 variant that is more frequent than the c.1148del mutation in our cohort of Jewish patients. Among our ACHM cohort, 63.7% of patients had biallelic CNGA3 mutations and 26.4% had biallelic CNGB3 mutations. The phenotype of patients harboring the intronic mutation falls largely within the spectrum commonly seen in ACHM. Since gene therapy for CNGB3 is currently under investigation, these patients might benefit from this promising therapy. Given that this variant is not detectable by current commonly used genetic testing platforms, these patients could easily be missed. Molecular Vision 2021-09-22 /pmc/articles/PMC8477987/ /pubmed/34703197 Text en Copyright © 2021 Molecular Vision. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/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, used for non-commercial purposes, and is not altered or transformed.
spellingShingle Research Article
Aweidah, Hamzah
Salameh, Manar
Yahalom, Claudia
Blumenfeld, Anat
Macarov, Michal
Weisschuh, Nicole
Kohl, Susanne
Banin, Eyal
Sharon, Dror
A deep intronic substitution in CNGB3 is one of the major causes of achromatopsia among Jewish patients
title A deep intronic substitution in CNGB3 is one of the major causes of achromatopsia among Jewish patients
title_full A deep intronic substitution in CNGB3 is one of the major causes of achromatopsia among Jewish patients
title_fullStr A deep intronic substitution in CNGB3 is one of the major causes of achromatopsia among Jewish patients
title_full_unstemmed A deep intronic substitution in CNGB3 is one of the major causes of achromatopsia among Jewish patients
title_short A deep intronic substitution in CNGB3 is one of the major causes of achromatopsia among Jewish patients
title_sort deep intronic substitution in cngb3 is one of the major causes of achromatopsia among jewish patients
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8477987/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34703197
work_keys_str_mv AT aweidahhamzah adeepintronicsubstitutionincngb3isoneofthemajorcausesofachromatopsiaamongjewishpatients
AT salamehmanar adeepintronicsubstitutionincngb3isoneofthemajorcausesofachromatopsiaamongjewishpatients
AT yahalomclaudia adeepintronicsubstitutionincngb3isoneofthemajorcausesofachromatopsiaamongjewishpatients
AT blumenfeldanat adeepintronicsubstitutionincngb3isoneofthemajorcausesofachromatopsiaamongjewishpatients
AT macarovmichal adeepintronicsubstitutionincngb3isoneofthemajorcausesofachromatopsiaamongjewishpatients
AT weisschuhnicole adeepintronicsubstitutionincngb3isoneofthemajorcausesofachromatopsiaamongjewishpatients
AT kohlsusanne adeepintronicsubstitutionincngb3isoneofthemajorcausesofachromatopsiaamongjewishpatients
AT banineyal adeepintronicsubstitutionincngb3isoneofthemajorcausesofachromatopsiaamongjewishpatients
AT sharondror adeepintronicsubstitutionincngb3isoneofthemajorcausesofachromatopsiaamongjewishpatients
AT aweidahhamzah deepintronicsubstitutionincngb3isoneofthemajorcausesofachromatopsiaamongjewishpatients
AT salamehmanar deepintronicsubstitutionincngb3isoneofthemajorcausesofachromatopsiaamongjewishpatients
AT yahalomclaudia deepintronicsubstitutionincngb3isoneofthemajorcausesofachromatopsiaamongjewishpatients
AT blumenfeldanat deepintronicsubstitutionincngb3isoneofthemajorcausesofachromatopsiaamongjewishpatients
AT macarovmichal deepintronicsubstitutionincngb3isoneofthemajorcausesofachromatopsiaamongjewishpatients
AT weisschuhnicole deepintronicsubstitutionincngb3isoneofthemajorcausesofachromatopsiaamongjewishpatients
AT kohlsusanne deepintronicsubstitutionincngb3isoneofthemajorcausesofachromatopsiaamongjewishpatients
AT banineyal deepintronicsubstitutionincngb3isoneofthemajorcausesofachromatopsiaamongjewishpatients
AT sharondror deepintronicsubstitutionincngb3isoneofthemajorcausesofachromatopsiaamongjewishpatients