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Comprehensive variant spectrum of the CNGA3 gene in patients affected by achromatopsia.

Authors :
Solaki M
Baumann B
Reuter P
Andreasson S
Audo I
Ayuso C
Balousha G
Benedicenti F
Birch D
Bitoun P
Blain D
Bocquet B
Branham K
Català-Mora J
De Baere E
Dollfus H
Falana M
Giorda R
Golovleva I
Gottlob I
Heckenlively JR
Jacobson SG
Jones K
Jägle H
Janecke AR
Kellner U
Liskova P
Lorenz B
Martorell-Sampol L
Messias A
Meunier I
Belga Ottoni Porto F
Papageorgiou E
Plomp AS
de Ravel TJL
Reiff CM
Renner AB
Rosenberg T
Rudolph G
Salati R
Sener EC
Sieving PA
Stanzial F
Traboulsi EI
Tsang SH
Varsanyi B
Weleber RG
Zobor D
Stingl K
Wissinger B
Kohl S
Source :
Human mutation [Hum Mutat] 2022 Jul; Vol. 43 (7), pp. 832-858. Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Apr 14.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Achromatopsia (ACHM) is a congenital cone photoreceptor disorder characterized by impaired color discrimination, low visual acuity, photosensitivity, and nystagmus. To date, six genes have been associated with ACHM (CNGA3, CNGB3, GNAT2, PDE6C, PDE6H, and ATF6), the majority of these being implicated in the cone phototransduction cascade. CNGA3 encodes the CNGA3 subunit of the cyclic nucleotide-gated ion channel in cone photoreceptors and is one of the major disease-associated genes for ACHM. Herein, we provide a comprehensive overview of the CNGA3 variant spectrum in a cohort of 1060 genetically confirmed ACHM patients, 385 (36.3%) of these carrying "likely disease-causing" variants in CNGA3. Compiling our own genetic data with those reported in the literature and in public databases, we further extend the CNGA3 variant spectrum to a total of 316 variants, 244 of which we interpreted as "likely disease-causing" according to ACMG/AMP criteria. We report 48 novel "likely disease-causing" variants, 24 of which are missense substitutions underlining the predominant role of this mutation class in the CNGA3 variant spectrum. In addition, we provide extensive in silico analyses and summarize reported functional data of previously analyzed missense, nonsense and splicing variants to further advance the pathogenicity assessment of the identified variants.<br /> (© 2022 The Authors. Human Mutation published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1098-1004
Volume :
43
Issue :
7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Human mutation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
35332618
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/humu.24371