Mutations in a new photoreceptor-pineal gene on 17p cause Leber congenital amaurosis
Leber congenital amaurosis (LCA, MIM 204000) accounts for at least 5% of all inherited retinal disease 1 and is the most severe inherited retinopathy with the earliest age of onset 2 . Individuals affected with LCA are diagnosed at birth or in the first few months of life with severely impaired visi...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature genetics 2000, Vol.24 (1), p.79-83 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Leber congenital amaurosis (LCA, MIM 204000) accounts for at least 5% of all inherited retinal disease
1
and is the most severe inherited retinopathy with the earliest age of onset
2
. Individuals affected with LCA are diagnosed at birth or in the first few months of life with severely impaired vision or blindness, nystagmus and an abnormal or flat electroretinogram (ERG). Mutations in
GUCY2D
(ref.
3
),
RPE65
(ref.
4
) and
CRX
(ref.
5
) are known to cause LCA, but one study identified disease-causing
GUCY2D
mutations in only 8 of 15 families whose LCA locus maps to 17p13.1 (ref.
3
), suggesting another LCA locus might be located on 17p13.1. Confirming this prediction, the LCA in one Pakistani family mapped to 17p13.1, between
D17S849
and
D17S960
—a region that excludes
GUCY2D
. The LCA in this family has been designated LCA4 (ref.
6
). We describe here a new photoreceptor/pineal-expressed gene,
AIPL1
(encoding aryl-hydrocarbon interacting protein-like 1), that maps within the LCA4 candidate region and whose protein contains three tetratricopeptide (TPR) motifs, consistent with nuclear transport or chaperone activity. A homozygous nonsense mutation at codon 278 is present in all affected members of the original LCA4 family.
AIPL1
mutations may cause approximately 20% of recessive LCA, as disease-causing mutations were identified in 3 of 14 LCA families not tested previously for linkage. |
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ISSN: | 1061-4036 1546-1718 |
DOI: | 10.1038/71732 |