We report five novel VMD2 mutations in Best's macular dystrophy patients (S16F, I73N, R92H, V235L, and N296S). An SSCP analysis of the VMD2 11 exons revealed electrophoretic mobility shifts exclusively in exons 2, 3, 4, 6 and 8. Direct sequencing indicated that these shifts are caused by mono-alleli
Ten novel mutations in VMD2 associated with Best macular dystrophy (BMD)
✍ Scribed by Franziska Krämer; Nicole Mohr; Ulrich Kellner; Günther Rudolph; Bernhard H.F. Weber
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 364 KB
- Volume
- 22
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1059-7794
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✦ Synopsis
Mutations in the vitelliform macular dystrophy 2 (VMD2) gene encoding besrtophin are responsible for Best macular dystrophy (BMD), a juvenile-onset autosomal dominant disorder of the central retina. Here, we report ten novel VMD2 mutations identified in clinically diagnosed BMD patients. The heterozygous alterations include nine missense mutations (c.32A>T, c.76G>C, c.85T>C, c.122T>C, c.122T>C, c.310G>C, c.722C>A, c.880C>G, c.893T>C) resulting in amino acid changes (respectively: Asn11Ile, Gly26Arg, Tyr29His, Leu41Pro, Trp102Arg, Asp104His, Thr241Asn, Leu294Val and Phe298Ser) located within four previously defined hotspot regions of the gene. In addition, a silent exonic mutation (c.624G>A) was identified in a two generation BMD pedigree. To determine a possible pathogenic effect of this variant, the consequences on splicing behaviour and potential exonic splice enhancer (ESE) motifs were analyzed. Finally, a 1-bp deletion (c.779delC) resulting in a frameshift mutation (Pro260fsX288) was found in exon 7, representing the first case of a potential frameshift mutation that affects the N-terminal half of the VMD2 protein. Besides a dominant negative effect which is likely attributable to the identified missense mutations, the deletion mutation suggests haploinsufficiency as an infrequent disease-causing mechanism in BMD.
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