4.7 Article

Mutations in the ABCA4 (ABCR) gene are the major cause of autosomal recessive cone-rod dystrophy

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS
Volume 67, Issue 4, Pages 960-966

Publisher

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/303079

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The photoreceptor cell-specific ATP-binding cassette transporter gene (ABCA4; previously denoted ABCR) is mutated in most patients with autosomal recessive (AR) Stargardt disease (STGD1) or fundus flavimaculatus (FFM). In addition, a few cases with AR retinitis pigmentosa (RP) and AR cone-rod dystrophy (CRD) have been found to have ABCA4 mutations. To evaluate the importance of the ABCA4 gene as a cause of Abi CRD, we selected 5 patients with AR CRD and 15 patients with isolated CRD, all from Germany and The Netherlands. Single-strand conformation-polymorphism analysis and sequencing revealed 19 ABCA4 mutations in 13 (65%) of 20 patients. In six patients, mutations were identified in both ABCA4 alleles; in seven patients, mutations were detected in one allele. One complex ABCA4 allele (L541P;A1038V) was found exclusively in German patients with CRD; one patient carried this complex allele homozygously and five others were compound heterozygous. These findings suggest that mutations in the ABCA4 gene are the major cause of AR CRD. A primary role of the ABCA4 gene in STGD1/FFM and AR CRD, together with the gene's involvement in an as-yet-unknown proportion of cases with AR RP, strengthens the idea that mutations in the ABCA4 gene could be the most frequent cause of inherited retinal dystrophy in humans.

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