4.5 Article

Frequent hypomorphic alleles account for a significant fraction of ABCA4 disease and distinguish it from age-related macular degeneration

期刊

JOURNAL OF MEDICAL GENETICS
卷 54, 期 6, 页码 404-412

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BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/jmedgenet-2017-104540

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资金

  1. National Eye Institute/NIH [EY021163, EY019861, EY019007]
  2. Pangere Family Foundation, Pangere Center, Chicago Lighthouse
  3. OPOS Stiftung zugunsten Wahrnehmungsbehinderten, St. Gallen, Switzerland
  4. AlfredVogt-Stifung, St. Gallen, Switzerland
  5. Research to Prevent Blindness (New York, NY)

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Background Variation in the ABCA4 gene is causal for, or associated with, a wide range of phenotypes from early onset Mendelian retinal dystrophies to late-onset complex disorders such as age-related macular degeneration (AMD). Despite substantial progress in determining the causal genetic variation, even complete sequencing of the entire open reading frame and splice sites of ABCA4 identifies biallelic mutations in only 60%-70% of cases; 20%-25% remain with one mutation and no mutations are found in 10%-15% of cases with clinically confirmed ABCA4 disease. This study was designed to identify missing causal variants specifically in monoallelic cases of ABCA4 disease. Methods Direct sequencing and analysis were performed in a large familial ABCA4 disease cohort of predominately European descent (n=643). Patient phenotypes were assessed from clinical and retinal imaging data. Results We determined that a hypomorphic ABCA4 variant c.5603A > T (p.Asn1868Ile), previously considered benign due to high minor allele frequency (MAF) (similar to 7%) in the general population, accounts for 10% of the disease, > 50% of the missing causal alleles in monoallelic cases, similar to 80% of late-onset cases and distinguishes ABCA4 disease from AMD. It results in a distinct clinical phenotype characterised by late-onset of symptoms (4th decade) and foveal sparing (85%). Intragenic modifying effects involving this variant and another, c.2588G > C (p.Gly863Ala) allele, were also identified. Conclusions These findings substantiate the causality of frequent missense variants and their phenotypic outcomes as a significant contribution to ABCA4 disease, particularly the late-onset phenotype, and its clinical variation. They also suggest a significant revision of diagnostic screening and assessment of ABCA4 variation in aetiology of retinal diseases.

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