4.8 Article

PDZD7 is a modifier of retinal disease and a contributor to digenic Usher syndrome

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION
Volume 120, Issue 6, Pages 1812-1823

Publisher

AMER SOC CLINICAL INVESTIGATION INC
DOI: 10.1172/JCI39715

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [BO2954/1-2, BE2212, SCHE1572]
  2. Forschung contra Blindheit: Initiative Usher-Syndrom e.V.
  3. Gertrud Kusen-Stiftung
  4. NIH [DC04186, HD22486]
  5. American Heart Association

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Usher syndrome is a genetically heterogeneous recessive disease characterized by hearing loss and retinitis pigmentosa (RP). It frequently presents with unexplained, often intrafamilial, variability of the visual phenotype. Although 9 genes have been linked with Usher syndrome, many patients do not have mutations in any of these genes, suggesting that there are still unidentified genes involved in the syndrome. Here, we have determined that mutations in PDZ domain-containing 7 (PDZD7), which encodes a homolog of proteins mutated in Usher syndrome subtype IC (USH1C) and USH2D, contribute to Usher syndrome. Mutations in PDZD7 were identified only in patients with mutations in other known Usher genes. In a set of sisters, each with a homozygous mutation in USH2A, a frame-shift mutation in PDZD7 was present in the sister with more severe RP and earlier disease onset. Further, heterozygous PDZD7 mutations were present in patients with truncating mutations in USH2A, G protein-coupled receptor 98 (GPR98; also known as USH2C), and an unidentified locus. We validated the human genotypes using zebrafish, and our findings were consistent with digenic inheritance of PDZD7 and GPR98, and with PDZD7 as a retinal disease modifier in patients with USH2A. Pdzd7 knockdown produced an Usher-like phenotype in zebrafish, exacerbated retinal cell death in combination with ush2a or gpr98, and reduced Gpr98 localization in the region of the photoreceptor connecting cilium. Our data challenge the view of Usher syndrome as a traditional Mendelian disorder and support the reclassification of Usher syndrome as an oligogenic disease.

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