Artigo Revisado por pares

AUTOSOMAL RECESSIVE VITELLIFORM MACULAR DYSTROPHY IN A LARGE COHORT OF VITELLIFORM MACULAR DYSTROPHY PATIENTS

2011; Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; Volume: 31; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1097/iae.0b013e318203ee60

ISSN

1539-2864

Autores

Tyson R. Kinnick, Robert F. Mullins, Sundeep Dev, Monique Leys, David A. Mackey, Christine N. Kay, Byron L. Lam, Gerald A. Fishman, Elias I. Traboulsi, Raymond Iezzi, Edwin M. Stone,

Tópico(s)

Connexins and lens biology

Resumo

In Brief Purpose: To report 11 cases of autosomal recessive vitelliform macular dystrophy and to compare their molecular findings and phenotypic characteristics with those of patients with the more common and well-described dominant form of the disease. Methods: Blood samples were obtained from 435 unrelated individuals with a clinical diagnosis of vitelliform macular dystrophy and screened for mutations in the coding sequences of BEST1. Medical records and retinal photographs of selected patients were reviewed. Results: Nine of the 435 probands were found to have 2 plausible disease-causing variations in BEST1, while 198 individuals were found to have heterozygous variations compatible with autosomal dominant inheritance. Inheritance phase was determined in three of the recessive families. Six novel disease-causing mutations were identified among these recessive patients: Arg47Cys, IVS7−2A>G, IVS7+4G>A, Ile205del12ATCCTGCTCCAGAG, Pro274Arg, and Ile366delCAGGTGTGGC. Forty-four novel disease-causing mutations were identified among the patients with presumed autosomal dominant disease. The phenotype of patients with recessive alleles for BEST1 ranged from typical vitelliform lesions to extensive extramacular deposits. Conclusion: The authors provide evidence that two abnormal BEST1 alleles, neither of which causes macular disease alone, can act in concert to cause early-onset vitelliform macular dystrophy. Supplemental digital content is available in this text. Vitelliform macular dystrophy is classically inherited as an autosomal dominant monogenetic disease of the macula. In this article, we review the molecular genetic studies of a cohort of 435 patients with vitelliform macular dystrophy, including 9 with recessive inheritance, and explore certain differences between dominant and recessive phenotypes.

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