Mutations in the ciliary transport gene IFT140 cause syndromic congenital retinal dystrophy.

Journal: Journal Of AAPOS : The Official Publication Of The American Association For Pediatric Ophthalmology And Strabismus
Published:
Abstract

Early-onset, severe retinal dystrophy can be isolated or syndromic, presenting as part of an underlying systemic disease. Mainzer-Saldino syndrome, a rare systemic ciliopathy characterized by skeletal and renal disease, is caused by recessive mutations in the intraflagellar transport 140 chlamydomonas homologue (IFT140) gene. We present a series of 13 cases of early-onset retinal dysfunction with confirmed IFT140 mutations from 8 unrelated Saudi families belonging to 3 well-known tribes. All carried the same homozygous missense IFT140 mutation (c.1990G>A; p.Glu664Lys) except for a single family, which included 4 affected subjects, 3 of whom were aborted fetuses, with compound heterozygous pathogenic IFT140 variants (c.1525-1G>A and c.1990G>A; p.Glu664Lys). Severe retinal dystrophy was present in all living subjects, phenotypically apparent as hyperopia, nystagmus, nyctalopia, poor vision and nonrecordable full-field electroretinography. All affected individuals had skeletal abnormalities, and neurological abnormalities were common, but there was no evidence of chronic renal failure.

Authors
Enam Danish, Amal Alhashem, Nada Naaman, Faeeqah Almhmoudi, Aziza Mushiba, Abdulrahman Almatrafi, Abdulaziz Raggam, Raghad Bukhari