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(Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science. 2007;48:4308-4314.)
© 2007 by The Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology, Inc.
DOI:  10.1167/iovs.07-0244

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Homozygosity for a Novel ABCA4 Founder Splicing Mutation Is Associated with Progressive and Severe Stargardt-like Disease

Anat Beit-Ya'acov,1 Liliana Mizrahi-Meissonnier,1 Alexey Obolensky,1 Carmit Landau,2 Anat Blumenfeld,1 Ada Rosenmann,2 Eyal Banin,1,3 and Dror Sharon1,3

1From the Department of Ophthalmology, Hadassah-Hebrew University Medical Center, Jerusalem, Israel; and the 2Michaelson Institute for vision rehabilitation, Hadassah-Hebrew University Medical Center, Jerusalem, Israel.

PURPOSE. To clinically characterize and genetically analyze members of six families who reside in the same village and manifest a rare form of retinal degeneration.

METHODS. Ophthalmic evaluation included a full clinical examination, perimetry, color vision testing, and electroretinography. Genomic DNA was screened for ABCA4 mutations with the use of microarray analysis and direct sequencing. RNA analysis was performed with RT-PCR and sequencing.

RESULTS. The authors recruited 15 patients with a unique retinal disease who are members of six highly consanguineous Arab-Muslim families from a single village. During early stages of disease, funduscopic and angiographic findings as well as retinal function resemble those of Stargardt disease. However, later in life, severe, widespread cone-rod degeneration ensues. Marked progressive involvement of the retinal periphery distinguishes this phenotype from classic Stargardt disease. Genetic analysis of ABCA4 revealed two novel deletions, p.Cys1150del and c.4254-15del23. One patient, who was a compound heterozygote, manifested typical Stargardt disease. The remaining 14 patients were homozygote for the c.4254- 15del23 intronic deletion and had the progressive form of disease. We identified an identical ABCA4 haplotype in all alleles carrying this mutation, indicating a founder mutation. Detailed RT-PCR analysis in normal retina and lymphoblastoid cells revealed expression of the full-length ABCA4 transcript and three novel transcripts produced by alternative splicing. The full-length ABCA4 transcript, however, could not be detected in lymphoblastoid cells of affected homozygote patients.

CONCLUSIONS. These results expand the genotype-phenotype correlation of ABCA4, showing that homozygosity for the novel c.4254-15del23 splicing mutation is associated with a severe progressive form of disease.








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