Novel mutation in sonic hedgehog in non‐syndromic colobomatous microphthalmia

LA Schimmenti, J De la Cruz, RA Lewis… - American journal of …, 2003 - Wiley Online Library
LA Schimmenti, J De la Cruz, RA Lewis, JD Karkera, GS Manligas, E Roessler, M Muenke
American journal of medical genetics Part A, 2003Wiley Online Library
Ocular (uveoretinal) colobomas occur in one in 10,000 individuals and present a substantive
cause of congenital poor vision. The genetic bases of most forms of uveoretinal coloboma
are elusive; mutations in PAX2 are found in only a few cases of coloboma of the retina and
optic nerve that occur with renal anomalies as part of the renal‐coloboma syndrome (MIM#
120330;# 167409). From experimental data that upstream expression of sonic hedgehog
(SHH) controls Pax2 expression in mice and zebrafish, and from clinical experience that …
Abstract
Ocular (uveoretinal) colobomas occur in one in 10,000 individuals and present a substantive cause of congenital poor vision. The genetic bases of most forms of uveoretinal coloboma are elusive; mutations in PAX2 are found in only a few cases of coloboma of the retina and optic nerve that occur with renal anomalies as part of the renal‐coloboma syndrome (MIM#120330; #167409). From experimental data that upstream expression of sonic hedgehog (SHH) controls Pax2 expression in mice and zebrafish, and from clinical experience that colobomas are observed frequently in patients with holoprosencephaly, we hypothesized that SHH could be a candidate for non‐syndromic ocular colobomas (NSOC). We identified a three‐generation family in which both a proband and his mother presented with iris and uveoretinal colobomas without optic nerve involvement. A novel 24 bp deletion in the gene SHH was identified in these affected family members, and cosegregated with the phenotype. This is the first report of the association of SHH mutations and uveoretinal coloboma. © 2002 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
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