4.8 Article

The landscape of submicroscopic structural variants at the OPN1LW/OPN1MW gene cluster on Xq28 underlying blue cone monochromacy

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2115538119

Keywords

human visual pigment genes; BCM; opsin gene deletion; gene conversion; locus control region

Funding

  1. German Research Council [Wi1189/12-1]
  2. UK Medical Research Council
  3. National Institute for Health Research Biomedical Research Centre at Moorfields Eye Hospital NHS Foundation Trust and UCL Institute of Ophthalmology
  4. Blue Cone Monochromacy Family Foundation
  5. Tistou and Charlotte Kerstan Foundation
  6. LabEx LifeSenses
  7. IHU FOReSIGHT
  8. Fondation Fighting Blindness grant [BR-GE-0619-0761-INSERM]

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Blue cone monochromacy (BCM) is an X-linked retinal disorder caused by mutations in the OPN1LW/OPN1MW gene cluster leading to impaired cone photoreceptor function. A study found that about one-third of BCM families carry submicroscopic structural variants (SVs), with deletions in the gene cluster being the most common. These SVs show diverse mechanisms and do not overlap, with 40 previously unreported SVs identified. The study also suggests that large gene arrays may predispose to SVs at this locus.
Blue cone monochromacy (BCM) is an X-linked retinal disorder characterized by low vision, photoaversion, and poor color discrimination. BCM is due to the lack of long-wavelength-sensitive and middle-wavelength-sensitive cone photoreceptor function and caused by mutations in the OPN1LW/OPN1MW gene cluster on Xq28. Here, we investigated the prevalence and the landscape of submicroscopic structural variants (SVs) at single-base resolution in BCM patients. We found that about one-third (n = 73) of the 213 molecularly confirmed BCM families carry an SV, most commonly deletions restricted to the OPN1LW/OPN1MW gene cluster. The structure and precise breakpoints of the SVs were resolved in all but one of the 73 families. Twenty-two families-all from the United States-showed the same SV, and we confirmed a common ancestry of this mutation. In total, 42 distinct SVs were identified, including 40 previously unreported SVs, thereby quadrupling the number of precisely mapped SVs underlying BCM. Notably, there was no region of overlap among these SVs. However, 90% of SVs encompass the upstream locus control region, an essential enhancer element. Its minimal functional extent based on deletion mapping in patients was refined to 358 bp. Breakpoint analyses suggest diverse mechanisms underlying SV formation as well as in one case the gene conversion-based exchange of a 142-bp deletion between opsin genes. Using parsimonious assumptions, we reconstructed the composition and copy number of the OPN1LW/OPN1MW gene cluster prior to the mutation event and found evidence that large gene arrays may be predisposed to the occurrence of SVs at this locus.

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