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1 From the Department of Molecular Genetics, Institute of Ophthalmology, London, United Kingdom; the 3 Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Royal Free and University College Medical School, London, United Kingdom; the 4 National Eye Clinic for the Visually Impaired, Hellerup, Denmark; the 5 University Institute of Medical Biochemistry and Genetics, Copenhagen, Denmark; the 6 University Hospital Lund, Lund, Sweden; 7 Erasme Hôpital, Brussels, Belgium; the 8 Jules Gonin Ophthalmic Hospital, Lausanne, Switzerland; 9 Addenbrookes Hospital, Cambridge, United Kingdom; and 10 Moorfields Eye Hospital, London, United Kingdom.
| Abstract |
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METHODS. All 28 coding exons of OPA1, intronexon splice sites, 273 bp 5' to exon 1, and two intronic regions with putative function were screened in 94 apparently unrelated white patients of European origin with adOA by single-strand conformational polymorphism (SSCP)heteroduplex analysis and direct sequencing. Clinical data were collated, and putative mutations were tested for segregation in the respective families by SSCP analysis or direct sequencing and in 100 control chromosomes. Further characterization of selected splice site mutations was performed by RT-PCR of patient leukocyte RNA. Staining of mitochondria in leukocytes of patients and control subjects was undertaken to assess gross differences in morphology and cellular distribution.
RESULTS. Twenty different mutations were detected, of which 14 were novel disease mutations (missense, nonsense, deletion-frameshift, and splice site alterations) and six were known mutations. Mutations were found in 44 (47%) of the 94 families included in the study. Ten new polymorphisms in the OPA1 gene were also identified. Mutations occur throughout the gene, with three clusters emerging: in the mitochondrial leader, in the highly conserved guanosine triphosphate (GTP)-binding domain, and in the -COOH terminus. Examination of leukocyte mitochondria from two unrelated patients with splice site mutations in OPA1 revealed no abnormalities of morphology or cellular distribution when compared with control individuals.
CONCLUSIONS. This study describes 14 novel mutations in the OPA1 gene in patients with adOA, bringing the total number so far reported to 54. It is likely that many cases of adOA are due to mutations outside the coding region of OPA1 or to large-scale rearrangements. Evaluation of the mutation spectrum indicates more than one pathophysiological mechanism for adOA. Preliminary data suggests that phenotype-genotype correlation is complex, implying a role for other genetic modifying or environmental factors. No evidence was found of pathologic changes in leukocyte mitochondria of patients with adOA.
| Introduction |
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The OPA1 gene has been identified recently from within this interval and has been shown to harbor mutations in patients with adOA.14 15 The OPA1 mRNA (GenBank accession AB011139; GenBank is provided in the public domain by the National Center for Biotechnology Information [NCBI], Bethesda, MD, and is available at http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genbank/) is 5821 bp long and is split into 29 exons spanning more than 60 kb of genomic DNA. The first 28 exons of the gene encode a dynamin-related large guanosine triphosphatase (GTPase) of 960 amino acids.14 15 Although the cellular role of OPA1 is unknown, putative functional information has been derived from in silico analysis of the primary protein sequence, which reveals a mitochondrial import motif also observed in dynamin-related large GTPases from other species that are most likely orthologues of OPA1.14 15 Studies in yeast have demonstrated that Dnm1,16 Mgm1,17 and Msp118 play an important role in the dynamics of mitochondrial morphology and the fusionfission processes that occur continually throughout the life of a cell. Of the yeast proteins, OPA1 shows greatest similarity (31%33% over 236 amino acids [aa]) at the primary level to Mgm1 (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) and Msp1 (Schizosaccharomyces pombe), the precise functions of which are unknown.18 It is likely that OPA1 is involved in a similar mitochondrial fusionfission pathway in humans.
Previous studies have reported a variety of mutations in OPA1 associated with adOA, including missense, nonsense, insertions, deletions, and splicing mutations.10 14 15 19 These mutations are spread throughout the gene coding sequence, with most of them clustering over the cDNA region corresponding to the GTPase domain (exons 816) and the 3' end of the coding region (exons 2728), whereas there is a relative paucity of mutations in exons 1 to 7.10 19
In this study, we screened, by SSCP or heteroduplex analysis, a large cohort (n = 94) of apparently unrelated patients with adOA for mutations in OPA1. In addition to the coding exons and associated splice sites, we also screened 273 bp 5' to the start of OPA1 exon 1, and 2 intronic regions (in introns 5 and 27) that were predicted by in silico sequence analysis to contain putative exons. We report 14 novel adOA mutations in OPA1, including five in hitherto unaffected exons (2, 3, 7, 18) and describe 10 new polymorphic variants. We established the molecular consequence at the RNA level of different splicing mutations in two unrelated patients. Furthermore, we performed mitochondrial staining on isolated leukocytes of selected affected individuals to investigate any gross differences in morphology or cellular distribution of these organelles.
| Materials and Methods |
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Mutation Screening
All 28 coding exons of OPA1 and intronexon splice sites were screened for mutations by SSCP, heteroduplex analysis, and direct sequencing in one affected individual from each family. Putative mutations were tested for segregation in the respective families by single-strand conformational polymorphism (SSCP)heteroduplex analysis or direct sequencing and in 100 control chromosomes. PCR products were amplified from patients DNA using primers located in flanking intron and untranslated region (UTR) sequences.19
Standard 25-µL PCR reactions were performed for SSCP analysis, heteroduplex analysis, and direct sequencing, using 100 to 200 ng template DNA, 50 mM KCl, 10 mM Tris (pH 8.8), 15 mM MgCl2, 1% Triton X-100, 0.2 mM each dNTP, 0.1 µM each primer, and 0.2 U Taq polymerase (Bio-Line, London, UK). Typical cycling conditions were as follows: initial denaturation of 95°C for 5 minutes; 35 cycles of 95°C for 30 seconds, 53°C to 63°C for 30 seconds (temperature optimized for each primer pair), and 72°C for 30 seconds; and a final extension of 72°C for 5 minutes.
PCR products were labeled by incorporation of [32P]-dCTP during amplification.20 Denatured PCR products mixed with an equal volume of formamide loading buffer containing 40 mM Ca(OH)2 were resolved in nondenaturing 0.5x mutation-detection electrophoresis (MDE) gels (Flowgen, Ltd., Lichfield, UK) in 0.6x Tris-borate EDTA buffer run at 8 to 10 W for 14 to 18 hours. Autoradiographs were exposed at -80°C for 1 to 12 hours.
PCR products were allowed to reanneal and then were analyzed by electrophoresis on MDE gels run at 180 V for 14 to 18 hours on commercial electrophoresis apparatus (600S; Hoeffer Scientific Instruments, San Francisco, CA).21 Gels were stained in 0.5 µg/mL ethidium bromide and visualized on a UV transilluminator.
PCR products showing conformational variants were sequenced bidirectionally after purification (QIAquick PCR purification kit; Qiagen, Crawley, UK), using fluorescent dideoxynucleotides (BigDye Terminator chemistry; PE Biosystems, Warrington, UK) and separated on an automated sequencer (ABI 377; PE Biosystems).
Mutation Detection in Leukocyte RNA
Leukocytes were isolated from whole blood by density-gradient centrifugation (Ficoll-Paque) according to the manufacturers instructions (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Little Chalfont, UK) and total RNA extracted (Trizol reagent; Invitrogen Life Technologies, Groningen, The Netherlands). Oligo(dT)-primed total leukocyte RNA was reverse transcribed into single-stranded cDNA using Protein A Sepharose beads (Ready-To-Go You-Prime First-Strand Beads; Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) and used to amplify cDNA segments encompassing splice site mutations IVS8+5g
a (cDNA PCR primers exon c6F: 5'-TGTCAGACAAAGAGAAAATTGAC-3', and exon c10R: 5'-ATCAAACTCCCGAGAACTATC-3') and IVS12+1g
a (cDNA PCR primers exon c10F: 5'-ACTCTGAGTGAAGGTCCTCAC-3', and exon c14R: 5'-TCTGCCAGGTCTACTTTGGAC-3'). RT-PCR products were separated on a 2% low-melting-point agarose gel and reamplified after gel excision, by using the same primers with 3 µL melted template. Individual products were then purified using the PCR purification kit (QIAquick; Qiagen) and sequenced bidirectionally from nested primers (for IVS8+5g
a, c6FN: 5'-AACTTCAGGAAGAACTTCTGC-3', and c10RN: 5'-AGGGCCACATGGTGAGGAC-3'; and for IVS12+1g
a, c10FN: 5'-AGTTCCGGGAGTTTGATCTTAC-3' and c14RN: 5'-AACGAATATGGTTCTCCTTCC-3') using fluorescent dideoxynucleotide chemistry (Big Dye) and separation on a DNA sequencer (ABI 377; PE Biosystems).
Identification of Putative Functional Sequences within Introns of OPA1
To identify the complete OPA1 genomic sequence, BLAST analysis of the OPA1 cDNA sequence (KIAA0567; GenBank AB011139) was performed at the National Center for Biotechnology Information, NCBI (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/) against The Human Genome. Genomic sequence NT_005571 was identified to contain the entire OPA1 cDNA (identity
100%) split into its 29 exons, with only 1 gap in intron 27, so that the entire gene (corresponding to the cDNA sequence KIAA0567i.e., from exon 1 to the end of exon 29) spans at least 97 kb of genomic DNA. The intronic sequences and putative 5' UTR were subjected to NIX analysis at the Human Gene Mapping Project (HGMP) to identify any further expressed sequence tag (EST) matches, putative novel exons, and coding regions.22
Mitochondrial Staining of Leukocytes
Leukocytes were isolated from blood of two unrelated patients with splice site mutations in OPA1 and two control subjects by density-gradient centrifugation (Ficoll-Paque; Amersham Pharmacia Biotech). Cells were seeded onto glass coverslips in Dulbeccos modified Eagles medium, and mitochondria were visualized with mitochondrion-selective dye (MitoTracker CMXRos-H2; Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) or immunostained with a monoclonal antibody against subunit I of cytochrome c oxidase, as described previously.23
Coverslips were mounted onto glass slides in fluorescent glycerol-PBS solution (Citifluor; Agar Scientific Ltd., Stansted, UK) supplemented with 1 µg/mL 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI). Slides were examined with a microscope (Axiophot; Carl Zeiss, Oberkochen, Germany) equipped with filters appropriate for rhodamine, fluorescein, and DAPI. Separate fluorescent images were captured with a cooled, integrated camera (ORCA; Hamamatsu, Hamamatsu City, Japan) with a 1280 x 1024-pixel array and a 12-bit gray-level resolution. The images were recombined, by using image analysis software (Photoshop; Adobe, San Diego, CA).
| Results |
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a has also been previously identified in one British family,10
and the recurrent mutation 2708del(TTAG), found in six of our families, has been reported in 10 different families in other studies.10
15
19
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Testing for reduced splice site functionality in the six putative splice site mutations predicted a reduced splicing efficiency to varying degrees (Table 1)
. Those sequence alterations affecting the highly conserved consensus G at position +1 of the donor splice site IVS3+1g
c, IVS9del(+1-5), IVS12+1g
a are all predicted to completely abolish the respective splice site (Table 1)
. RT-PCR of total leukocyte RNA from two affected individuals from one large family segregating the IVS12+1g
a mutation revealed complete skipping of exon 12 in mature transcripts (Fig. 1)
. The IVS8+5g
a mutation segregating in one family large enough to show prior linkage to the OPA1 locus is predicted to reduce the strength of the corresponding donor splice site, but not completely eradicate it (Table 1)
. RT-PCR of total leukocyte RNA from two disease haplotype-bearing individuals from this family, both of whom harbor the mutation indicated skipping of exon 8 in both cases (Fig 1)
, as has been reported for this mutation in an independent study.10
This is especially interesting, because one of these two individuals had obvious clinical signs and symptoms of adOA, whereas the other had reduced penetrance for the disease. Unfortunately, fresh blood could not be obtained for RNA analysis from the patients with putative splicing mutation IVS9+3a
t or the double alteration IVS27+6t
c/IVS26-10c
g. Although these sequence alterations affect less-conserved nucleotides, the changes segregate with adOA in the small families in which they were detected (five affected members and three affected members respectively), are predicted to affect splicing efficiency (Table 1)
, and were not found in more than 50 control individuals.
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exons 816) of OPA1, emphasizing that OPA1 GTPase activity is particularly critical for retinal ganglion cell development and function. The sole missense mutation 2354A
G so far reported outside this region in exon 23,19
together with the four in-frame deletions so far identified in exon 2112-139del(18bp), this study; exon 13, 1296delCAT14
; exon 17, 1651delTGC19
; and exon 18, 1756-1767del(12bp), this studyare all predicted to result in a nontruncated OPA1 polypeptide, but may lead to an altered conformation of the protein.
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exons 12) of the OPA1 gene14
15
: a nonsense mutation Arg38STOP and an in-frame deletion of six amino acids of the first of three predicted cleavage sites for mitochondrial import peptidases.14
Examination of the putative salmon, Drosophila melanogaster, and Caenorhabditis elegans OPA1 orthologous protein sequences (protein accession numbers BAA32279, AAF58275, and CAA87771, respectively) reveals only one of these sites, corresponding approximately to the third in humans from amino acid residues 100 to 110. In the murine orthologue (AB044138), however, the first and third sites are retained (data not shown). Future work may elucidate whether the first cleavage site is indeed functional only in mammals. No conserved protein motifs or domains were evident on bioinformatic analysis of the primary sequence of the COOH-terminal region of OPA1, which corresponds to a third mutation cluster (exons 27 and 28) and has unknown function (Fig 2) . Bioinformatic analysis of the protein primary structure has revealed two coiledcoil domains in OPA1: one spanning residues 226 to 268 and one from 940 to 969.24 Coiledcoil domains are thought to be intrinsically involved in protein interactions and therefore highlight domains of OPA1 for future investigation by yeast-2-hybrid/pull-down assay for binding partners. The second coiledcoil is completely removed by the common 2708del(TTAG) mutation in exon 27 (data not shown), but is only marginally reduced in probability score by the 2826delT mutation in exon 28.25
Prevalence of Mutations in OPA1 in the Current Study
Overall, OPA1 mutations were detected in 44 of 94 patients with adOA, for a detection frequency of 47%. It is possible that some of the remaining cases represent nonallelic genetic heterogeneity, autosomal recessive, or X-linked forms of optic atrophy.25
Of the patients with mutations, 16% (7/44) were from individual families linked to chromosome 3q28-qter with lod scores greater than 3, and 57% (25/44) were from small families with lod scores lower than 3 or a haplotype compatible with linkage to chromosome 3q28-qter. The remaining 27% (12/44) of the mutations were from pedigrees for which no marker data were available, but which showed a strong family history of optic atrophy compatible with autosomal dominant inheritance. No mutations were discovered in families with affected siblings in only one generation. When considering the total number of families in each of these categories, it is apparent that mutations are found in 70% (26/37) of pedigrees showing linkagehaplotype data consistent with disease segregation with the OPA1 locus and in only 34% (18/53) with a family history in the absence of marker data. This finding is important, because it suggests that it may be worth screening a patient for a mutation in OPA1 only if haplotypelinkage data suggest dominant inheritance of optic atrophy or if there is a clinical picture strongly suggestive of adOA in the absence of a clear-cut dominant history.
In addition, we identified one family of 15 affected members that shows no evidence of linkage to the chromosome 3q28-qter OPA1 locus (D3S3669: Zmax = 0.19,
max = 0.33; D3S3642: Zmax = 0.16,
max = 0.35; D3S3590: Zmax = 0.97,
max = 0.19; D3S3562: Zmax = 0.48,
max = 0.50; where Z is Lod Score and
is recombination fraction) and in which the chromosome 18 OPA4 locus has also been excluded (data not shown). Including only the known affected individuals from this family in the linkage analysis excludes the chromosome 3q28 locus (D3S3669: Zmax = 0.27,
max = 0.14; D3S3590: Zmax = 0.25,
max = 0.23). It is possible that this family represents a new as yet unmapped genetic locus for adOA. The clinical phenotype in this family is very similar to the chromosome 3associated phenotype7
and also overlaps the phenotype of the single family mapping to the OPA4 locus on chromosome 18.11
Mutation Screening of Additional ORFs in OPA1
Because mutations were not identified in 11/37 (30%) index patients from families mapping to 3q28 through linkagehaplotype analysis, we investigated the possible existence of additional as yet undetected exonic sequences or open reading frames (ORFs) lying within the known OPA1 introns and 5' UTR, which are not present in the original full-length mRNA sequence AB011139 (derived from brain) but may contribute to alternative splice isoforms or tissue-specific transcripts. NIX analysis of these OPA1 extraexonic regions predicted several sequence segments containing putative ORFs, three of which were examined further, in introns 5 and 27 and extending 5' from exon 1.
NIX analysis revealed 99% identity to EST BG470279 overlapping and extending 5' to exon 1 of OPA1 (as defined by the start of mRNA sequence AB011139). This EST matched the OPA1 mRNA over the mitochondrial leader (96%) and extended 5' for a further 195 bp. This region contained an ORF in-frame with the OPA1 protein sequence (BAA29453), potentially adding a further 63 amino acids to the 5' of OPA1 or, alternatively, containing regulatory sequences. However, we discovered no SSCP band shifts on screening 273 bp 5' to OPA1 exon 1 in adOA index patients.
A 111-bp stretch of DNA in intron 5 (IVS5+7613-+7724) gave an excellent exon prediction by three different programs (GRAIL, GENSCAN, and Genefinder22 ), with predicted splice sites matching the Kozak consensus26 and a predicted ORF of 37 amino acids. Although this polypeptide sequence showed no significant match by BLAST analysis to any known protein sequence, the predicted exon (putative exon 5a) identified two human ESTs (99% identity; AA334558, embryo; AW996319, breast) which both contained contiguous sequence 3' and 5' to the region of identity matching exons 5 and 6 of the OPA1 gene (AB011139). The putative exon also identified four mouse ESTs by sequence similarity search (BB254844, 89%, cerebellum; BB395916, 90%, cerebellum; BB546811, 93%, eye; BE303971, 96%, ductal carcinoma), which show 92% to 98% identity to mouse mRNA for large GTP-binding protein AB044138, the presumed murine orthologue of human OPA1 (88% identity over the entire length at the nucleotide level, 96% at the amino acid level). This may be indicative of conserved, hence functionally important, sequences.
NIX analysis of intron 27 predicted a marginal exon (FEX, HEXON, FGENE22 ) spanning a 365-bp stretch of DNA (IVS27+1041-+1406; putative exon 27a). Putative acceptor and donor splice sites were present (scores 0.97 and 0.89 respectively; http://www.fruitfly.org/seq_tools/splice.html). This predicted exon translates into an ORF of 121 amino acids, showing no significant similarity to known polypeptides. However, this nucleotide stretch shows 100% identity to an EST (accession T96104) and to UniGene cDNA cluster Hs.331315 (complementary strand). There is also a polyadenylation signal 205 bp downstream of this predicted exon, which could represent the 3' end of an alternative OPA1 transcript.
RT-PCR of fetal brain cDNA (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA), adult retina cDNA library lysates (gift from Jeremy Nathans, Johns Hopkins Medical School, Baltimore, MD), and normal leukocyte cDNA (prepared as above from control blood) using cDNA primers designed to amplify from exon 5a to exon 7, and exon 26 to exon 27a, produced no amplification product. This suggests that these putative exons are not present in contiguity with exon 7 (for 5a) or exon 26 (for 27a) in the library aliquots studied. Furthermore, SSCP analysis of patients with adOA, in whom no OPA1 mutation had been identified, revealed no sequence alterations in putative exons 5a or 27a.
Current Single-Nucleotide Polymorphism Catalog of OPA1
During the mutation screening, 16 single-nucleotide polymorphism SNPs were found within the OPA1 gene, 10 of which are reported herein for the first time (Table 2)
. Two of these sequence changes, C500T and IVS7del(+49-51), were identified in single adOA families and were not found in 100 control chromosomes. That C500T, although resulting in the nonconservative amino acid change Pro167Leu, clearly did not segregate with disease in the family in which it was detected on repeated analysis makes it likely to be a rare polymorphism. This amino acid substitution is a known polymorphic variant in other genes.27
28
The IVS7del(+49-51) alteration was found in a patient who also harbored the 2708del(TTAG) frameshift mutation (Table 1)
. This work extends the current SNP catalog for OPA1 to 27, of which 9 are cSNPs.10
15
19
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a and IVS8+5g
a) and normal individuals with mitochondrion-selective dye (MitoTracker CMXRos-H2; Molecular Probes). The dye showed that mitochondria were present as discrete entities in the cytosol around the nucleus of these circulating cells (Fig. 3)
. There was no notable difference in mitochondrial morphology and distribution between patients and control subjects. Immunostaining with a monoclonal antibody against the mitochondrial DNA-encoded subunit I of cytochrome c oxidase produced an identical staining pattern (data not shown).
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c/IVS26-10c
gdo not have a milder phenotype than patients with mutations predicted to severely truncate the protein (Table 3)
.
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Based on these definitions, an estimate of penetrance for the two families in whom it was possible to examine all affected and unaffected individuals showed highly differing values ranging from 100% (pedigree A1, splice site mutation intron 12: IVS12+1g
a) to 67% (pedigree K1, deletion of entire exon 20). From the 11 pedigrees in Table 3
, we detected four cases of nonpenetrance in three pedigrees (K1, L1, and P1) after clinical examination of symptomatic and asymptomatic family members.
We found six further individuals in five adOA-affected pedigrees (not tabulated in Table 3 ) who were asymptomatic and who carried the disease-associated mutation, but for whom clinical data are insufficient to make the distinction between nonpenetrance and partial penetrance on these criteria: one patient: exon 18, G1712A; one patient: exon 18, 1756-1767del; three patients from two families: exon 27, 2708del(TTAG); and one patient: exon 28 (2826delT). The mutation exon 27 2708del(TTAG) has been associated with reduced penetrance.10 However, the presence of reduced penetrance in family P1 with mutation IVS9del(+1-5) suggests that a predisposition to reduced penetrance is not solely due to mutations located 3' to the GTPase domain of OPA1.
| Discussion |
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Of the 54 OPA1 mutations reported to cause adOA to date, the majority (26, or almost 50%) cause premature truncation of the OPA1 protein or create novel COOH termini. This number may in fact be larger, owing to the introduction of frameshifts by some of the 11 splice site mutations, which has not yet been demonstrated because patients RNA was unavailable (Table 1) .10 19 Recent studies have shown that some missense and nonsense mutations, previously presumed to exert their pathogenic effects solely on either the resultant amino acid change or protein truncation, may instead lead to aberrant splicing by disruption of exon-splicing enhancers (ESEs) or suppressors (ESSs).30 Whether this means that most cases of adOA caused by mutations in OPA1 effectively result from null mutations that may halve the amount of normal OPA1 protein in the cell (haploinsufficiency) and this is sufficient to cause disease awaits the results of future experiments. Many mutations do not truncate the protein, which may either be rapidly degraded or interfere in a dominantnegative manner with the OPA1 polypeptide arising from the normal gene copy. Therefore, there is possible evidence for more than one disease mechanism underlying adOA.
The cluster of mutations resulting in loss or abnormality of the -COOH terminus of OPA1 highlights the physiological importance of this protein domain. The occurrence of a founder mutationexon 28, (2826delT)in the -COOH terminus may account for the high frequency of adOA in Denmark.24 That adOA mutations in the 3' coding exons 27 and 28 which disrupt the ORF can produce a phenotype of clinical severity comparable to those in regions of known functional significance highlights the integral contribution of the OPA1 COOH terminus to the correct cellular function of this protein. The COOH terminus of the dynamin family of GTPases is not well conserved, apparently imparting unique functional attributes to each specific member, and it may be that this region of OPA1 is intrinsically essential to its specific role in the mitochondria.31 This may explain how mutations affecting only the very COOH end of OPA1 protein could give rise to disease.
Low Detection Rate of OPA1 Gene Mutations in adOA Pedigrees
In total, SSCP and heteroduplex analysis of all coding exons of OPA1 identified mutations in 44 of 94 adOA patients, an overall detection rate of 47%. This is comparable with the results of other recent studies with rates ranging from 32.1% to 57%.10
19
This low detection rate may be ascribed to a combination of factors: the screening methods used are not 100% effective (in our case, SSCPheteroduplex analysis); large-scale mutations (deletions, insertions) are undetectable by these same methods, which may account for a significant number of cases; or mutations residing in unscreened portions of the gene (e.g., introns, 5' UTRpromoter regions, 3' UTR). However, the mutation detection methods we used are known to be at least 80% effective,32
which alone would not account for the 53% of mutations left undetected. If there are OPA1 mutations present in the remaining patients, it is likely that they reside in noncoding portions of the gene involved in regulatory processes or nondetection may be due to gross DNA rearrangements that require other methods (e.g., Southern blot analysis, RT-PCR) for their detection.
The OPA1 gene has been shown to express alternative transcripts in a variety of tissues.14 15 To address the possibility that additional exons and ORFs exist in the introns or 5' or 3' UTRs of the original brain-derived transcript (GenBank entry AB011139), we extracted these sequences through computational analysis from The Human Genome at NCBI and subjected them to NIX analysis in the HGMP.22 Introns 5 and 27 contained exons predicted by more than one program, with ORFs and EST matches. Although we did not find any adOA mutations in these putative exons and could not link them to the known OPA1 transcript sequence in human retina, fetal brain cDNA libraries or leukocyte cDNA, further studies may reveal functional significance for these OPA1-intragenic sequences and others like them. Even if such intronic sequences do not normally contribute to the OPA1 transcript profile, pseudoexon activation, caused by mutations in intronic nucleotides, is becoming more widely recognized as a genetic disease mechanism.33 Screening of 273 nucleotides, matching EST BG470279 and extending the ORF 5' to the putative start of OPA1 exon 1, revealed no further mutations in our panel of patients.
Mitochondrial Integrity and Subcellular Localization in Lymphocytes of Patients and Control Subjects
The pathophysiology and clinical symptoms observed in adOA show overlap with those occurring in Leber hereditary optic neuropathy,34
caused by mutations in mtDNA-encoded genes for subunits of complex I of the respiratory chain.35
Therefore, it is tempting to speculate that mutations in OPA1 leading to disturbances of mitochondrial integrity may compromise the energy supply to the highly energy-demanding optic nerve tissue, so that it degenerates and visual impairment ensues. Delettre et al.15
reported that the mitochondrial network is disorganized in leukocytes from patients with OPA1. Their micrograph of control leukocytes immunostained with anti-HSP60 showed general cytoplasmic staining with no evidence of a mitochondrial network, whereas the antibody seemed to reveal clumps of mitochondria in patients cells. Our results are very different. Instead of a general cytoplasmic staining of control leukocytes, we clearly observed a discrete mitochondrial network in the cytosol with the mitochondrion-selective dye (Fig. 3)
and with an antibody against cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (data not shown). Patients cells showed a mitochondrial network that was indistinguishable from that of normal individuals and, moreover, similar to the results reported by Delettre et al.15
Blood monocytes and granulocytes have extra-large nuclei, folded and lobed, respectively, that leave little room for the cytoplasm in these cells. We thus believe that the distribution of mitochondria observed in patients by both groups, actually represents the typical pattern expected for normal blood monocytes. Therefore, we conclude that these OPA1 mutations have no observable effect on the mitochondrial distribution in leukocytes. The contradictory results of Delettre et al.15
could in part be explained by the fact that different patients and mutations were studied but are more likely due to differences in methodology. The absence of any mitochondrial network in their control cells suggests that the cellular structures were not properly fixed before antibody incubation. If adOA caused by OPA1 mutations is a mitochondriopathy, our findings failed to provide evidence that the disease is readily observable in patients leukocytes. Either the mitochondrial abnormalities are limited to the cells of the retinal ganglion cell layer or optic nerve or are more subtle than our methods can detect. Systematic characterization of mitochondria staining patterns across a more comprehensive array of patient OPA1 mutations and control individuals is warranted to clarify this issue. Nevertheless, we conclude that diagnosis of adOA based on mitochondrial morphology or distribution in blood leukocytes is currently inadvisable.
OPA1 Gene Founder Effects and Mutation Hot Spots in adOA
One frameshift mutation 2826delT in exon 28 has been identified in 14 Danish patients (Table 1)
. Statistical analysis of patient haplotypes versus control subjects strongly indicates this mutation to be a founder allele in the Danish population, which may explain the higher prevalence of adOA in Denmark.24
Of 38 British families previously analyzed by haplotype and linkage disequilibrium analysis, 36 had haplotypes compatible with a founder effect.36 We have found mutations in 15 of these families. The gene OPA1 lies closest to marker D3S2305, contrary to the predicted likely position by linkage disequilibrium, which placed the gene at approximately 400 kb either side of D3S1523. The inaccuracy of the founder prediction may be in part due to a change in marker order used in the founder prediction versus the marker order now accepted through physical mapping.24 Marker D3S2305, then placed between D3S3642 and D3S3590, using the best available genetic data then available (GeneMap 1997 [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genemap97]), is now known to lie between D3S3590 and D3S3562. This change in marker order over a critical part of the haplotype has the effect of breaking up the core founder haplotype so that only 15 families appear to share a core haplotype across the OPA1 disease interval.
Examination of our revised marker allele data for microsatellite markers spanning the D3S3669-D3S3562 interval reveals that three families with a mutation in exon 15 (C1508A, two of which are B1 and L1 in Table 3
) share a common haplotype for markers D3S3642, D3S3590, and D3S3562, encompassing a
640kb genomic interval (data not shown). Of the 12 remaining families in whom we have found mutations and who were analyzed in the assessment of the founder effect,36
only three others show a core haplotype from markers D3S1523 to D3S2305 that would be consistent with a founder effect. However, these three families have three different splice site mutations: IVS8+5g
a (family G1), IVS12+1g
a (family A1), and IVS27+6t
c/-10c
g (family F3), illustrating that a common haplotype does not always guarantee common ancestry.
The 2708del(TTAG) frameshift mutation has been found in white patients of various nationalities (Australian, France, Belgian, German, British, Brazilian; Table 1
),10
15
19
which may indicate that it represents a mutation hot spot. Two novel recurrent mutations detected in this screen are located in exon 12: missense T1188G in two British families and splice site IVS12+1g
a in three British families (Table 1)
. We found no evidence of shared haplotypes for OPA1-linked markers in these families, implying novel mutation hot spots in this gene.
Intra- and Interfamily Variability in Expression of adOA
Preliminary data suggest that phenotypegenotype correlations in patients with adOA with mutations in the OPA1 gene appear to be weak and indicate that other factors, such as genetic background, modifier loci, and/or environmental influences play an important role in phenotypic expression. There was a fairly frequent occurrence of asymptomatic carriers in our family cohort with mutations, notably in two families with the 2708del(TTAG) mutation, as has been reported previously.10
Furthermore, we found cases of nonpenetrance in families with three other mutations, with a variable penetrance estimate in appropriate large families from 100% for the IVS12+1g
t mutation, resulting in exon 12 skipping, to 67% for the del(exon20) frameshift mutation. Thus it appears that adOA may be a monogenic disorder due primarily to the disruption of a single gene, but has a complex phenotypic expression owing to other genetic, epigenetic or environmental factors impacting greatly on the clinical outcome.37
There are now 27 polymorphisms described within exons and introns of the OPA1 gene, including 10 that are novel in this study. Sequence variants, such as these, although not individually associated with adOA, may contribute to subtle variations in structure and function, or may influence gene expression and the phenotypic expression of individual mutations. Variable penetrance in genetic disease has been shown in some instances to be affected by polymorphisms within the wild-type allele at the disease locus.38 Although we do not yet know the mechanism of reduced penetrance in adOA caused by mutations in the OPA1 gene, a catalog of benign sequence variants will undoubtedly add to our future understanding of how this gene and its encoded protein operate in health and disease.
| Acknowledgements |
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| Footnotes |
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Supported by Project Grant 056047 from The Wellcome Trust (Grant 313/ARC); British Council/German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD); University College London, Central Research Fund; Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft; and the Swiss National Science Foundation.
Submitted for publication September 25, 2001; revised January 16, 2002; accepted February 6, 2002.
Commercial relationships policy: N.
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page charge payment. This article must therefore be marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C.
1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Corresponding author: Marcela Votruba, Department of Molecular Genetics, Institute of Ophthalmology, Bath Street, London EC1V 9EL, UK; m_votruba{at}altavista.co.uk.
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C 267 serotonin 5-HT6 receptor gene (HTR6) polymorphism and prediction of response to clozapine in schizophrenia Schizophr Res 47,49-58[Medline][Order article via Infotrieve]
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