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826
result(s) for
"Eye Abnormalities - pathology"
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Joubert syndrome: a model for untangling recessive disorders with extreme genetic heterogeneity
by
Doherty, D
,
Phelps, I G
,
O'Roak, B J
in
Abnormalities, Multiple - genetics
,
Abnormalities, Multiple - pathology
,
Ataxia
2015
BackgroundJoubert syndrome (JS) is a recessive neurodevelopmental disorder characterised by hypotonia, ataxia, cognitive impairment, abnormal eye movements, respiratory control disturbances and a distinctive mid-hindbrain malformation. JS demonstrates substantial phenotypic variability and genetic heterogeneity. This study provides a comprehensive view of the current genetic basis, phenotypic range and gene–phenotype associations in JS.MethodsWe sequenced 27 JS-associated genes in 440 affected individuals (375 families) from a cohort of 532 individuals (440 families) with JS, using molecular inversion probe-based targeted capture and next-generation sequencing. Variant pathogenicity was defined using the Combined Annotation Dependent Depletion algorithm with an optimised score cut-off.ResultsWe identified presumed causal variants in 62% of pedigrees, including the first B9D2 mutations associated with JS. 253 different mutations in 23 genes highlight the extreme genetic heterogeneity of JS. Phenotypic analysis revealed that only 34% of individuals have a ‘pure JS’ phenotype. Retinal disease is present in 30% of individuals, renal disease in 25%, coloboma in 17%, polydactyly in 15%, liver fibrosis in 14% and encephalocele in 8%. Loss of CEP290 function is associated with retinal dystrophy, while loss of TMEM67 function is associated with liver fibrosis and coloboma, but we observe no clear-cut distinction between JS subtypes.ConclusionsThis work illustrates how combining advanced sequencing techniques with phenotypic data addresses extreme genetic heterogeneity to provide diagnostic and carrier testing, guide medical monitoring for progressive complications, facilitate interpretation of genome-wide sequencing results in individuals with a variety of phenotypes and enable gene-specific treatments in the future.
Journal Article
Super-resolution microscopy reveals that disruption of ciliary transition-zone architecture causes Joubert syndrome
2017
Ciliopathies, including nephronophthisis (NPHP), Meckel syndrome (MKS) and Joubert syndrome (JBTS), can be caused by mutations affecting components of the transition zone, a domain near the base of the cilium that controls the protein composition of its membrane. We defined the three-dimensional arrangement of key proteins in the transition zone using two-colour stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy (STORM). NPHP and MKS complex components form nested rings comprised of nine-fold doublets. JBTS-associated mutations in
RPGRIP1L
or
TCTN2
displace certain transition-zone proteins. Diverse ciliary proteins accumulate at the transition zone in wild-type cells, suggesting that the transition zone is a waypoint for proteins entering and exiting the cilium. JBTS-associated mutations in
RPGRIP1L
disrupt SMO accumulation at the transition zone and the ciliary localization of SMO. We propose that the disruption of transition-zone architecture in JBTS leads to a failure of SMO to accumulate at the transition zone and cilium, disrupting developmental signalling in JBTS.
Shi
et al.
map the ciliary transition zone by STORM imaging, characterizing protein arrangements in nested rings and finding that mutations in
RPGRIP1L
that are associated with the ciliopathy Joubert syndrome disrupt SMO ciliary localization.
Journal Article
Targeted exon skipping of a CEP290 mutation rescues Joubert syndrome phenotypes in vitro and in a murine model
by
Srivastava, Shalabh
,
Steel, David H.
,
Saunier, Sophie
in
Abnormalities, Multiple - genetics
,
Abnormalities, Multiple - pathology
,
Adolescent
2018
Genetic treatments of renal ciliopathies leading to cystic kidney disease would provide a real advance in current therapies. Mutations in CEP290 underlie a ciliopathy called Joubert syndrome (JBTS). Human disease phenotypes include cerebral, retinal, and renal disease, which typically progresses to end stage renal failure (ESRF) within the first two decades of life. While currently incurable, there is often a period of years between diagnosis and ESRF that provides a potential window for therapeutic intervention. By studying patient biopsies, patient-derived kidney cells, and a mouse model, we identify abnormal elongation of primary cilia as a key pathophysiological feature of CEP290-associated JBTS and show that antisense oligonucleotide (ASO)-induced splicing of the mutated exon (41, G1890*) restores protein expression in patient cells. We demonstrate that ASO-induced splicing leading to exon skipping is tolerated, resulting in correct localization of CEP290 protein to the ciliary transition zone, and restoration of normal cilia length in patient kidney cells. Using a gene trap Cep290 mouse model of JBTS, we show that systemic ASO treatment can reduce the cystic burden of diseased kidneys in vivo. These findings indicate that ASO treatment may represent a promising therapeutic approach for kidney disease in CEP290-associated ciliopathy syndromes.
Journal Article
Primary cilia formation requires the Leigh syndrome–associated mitochondrial protein NDUFAF2
by
Yu, Charles Q.
,
Sun, Yang
,
Liu, Zhiquan
in
Abnormalities, Multiple - genetics
,
Abnormalities, Multiple - metabolism
,
Abnormalities, Multiple - pathology
2024
Mitochondria-related neurodegenerative diseases have been implicated in the disruption of primary cilia function. Mutation in an intrinsic mitochondrial complex I component NDUFAF2 has been identified in Leigh syndrome, a severe inherited mitochondriopathy. Mutations in ARMC9, which encodes a basal body protein, cause Joubert syndrome, a ciliopathy with defects in the brain, kidney, and eye. Here, we report a mechanistic link between mitochondria metabolism and primary cilia signaling. We discovered that loss of NDUFAF2 caused both mitochondrial and ciliary defects in vitro and in vivo and identified NDUFAF2 as a binding partner for ARMC9. We also found that NDUFAF2 was both necessary and sufficient for cilia formation and that exogenous expression of NDUFAF2 rescued the ciliary and mitochondrial defects observed in cells from patients with known ARMC9 deficiency. NAD+ supplementation restored mitochondrial and ciliary dysfunction in ARMC9-deficient cells and zebrafish and ameliorated the ocular motility and motor deficits of a patient with ARMC9 deficiency. The present results provide a compelling mechanistic link, supported by evidence from human studies, between primary cilia and mitochondrial signaling. Importantly, our findings have significant implications for the development of therapeutic approaches targeting ciliopathies.
Journal Article
Arl13b-regulated cilia activities are essential for polarized radial glial scaffold formation
by
Guo, Jiami
,
Hirt, Joshua
,
Anton, E S
in
631/378/2571/2575
,
631/378/2571/2579
,
Abnormalities, Multiple
2013
Joubert syndrome, a recessive neurodevelopmental disorder associated with cortical malformations and autism-like features, has been linked to mutations in the gene encoding Arl13b, a cilia-enriched small GTPase. Here, Higginbotham and colleagues show that the early loss of function of Arl13b in mouse cortical progenitors leads to deficits in progenitors' ciliary signaling, apical–basal inversion of the radial glial scaffold and neuronal misplacement.
The construction of cerebral cortex begins with the formation of radial glia. Once formed, polarized radial glial cells divide either symmetrically or asymmetrically to balance appropriate production of progenitor cells and neurons. Following birth, neurons use the processes of radial glia as scaffolding for oriented migration. Radial glia therefore provide an instructive structural matrix to coordinate the generation and placement of distinct groups of cortical neurons in the developing cerebral cortex. We found that Arl13b, a cilia-enriched small GTPase that is mutated in Joubert syndrome, was critical for the initial formation of the polarized radial progenitor scaffold. Using developmental stage–specific deletion of Arl13b in mouse cortical progenitors, we found that early neuroepithelial deletion of ciliary Arl13b led to a reversal of the apical–basal polarity of radial progenitors and aberrant neuronal placement. Arl13b modulated ciliary signaling necessary for radial glial polarity. Our findings indicate that Arl13b signaling in primary cilia is crucial for the initial formation of a polarized radial glial scaffold and suggest that disruption of this process may contribute to aberrant neurodevelopment and brain abnormalities in Joubert syndrome–related ciliopathies.
Journal Article
Further evidence of RNU4ATAC variants causing Joubert syndrome with skeletal involvement
2025
RNU4ATAC is a non-coding gene involved in the minor spliceosome, and is mutated in a spectrum of syndromic skeletal disorders with recessive inheritance. Recently, biallelic RNU4ATAC pathogenic variants were detected in five patients presenting a complex syndromic phenotype and a brain malformation resembling the ‘molar tooth sign’ (MTS). This is the hallmark of Joubert syndrome (JS), a neurodevelopmental ciliopathy with multiorgan involvement.We reanalysed exome sequencing (ES) from 53 patients with JS, who lacked coding variants in known JS-associated genes. Four RNU4ATAC variants (n.16G>A, n.51G>A, n.13C>T and n.30G>A) were identified in compound heterozygosity in three probands, accounting for 5.6% of negative cases. All patients displayed the MTS and clinical features overlapping those of JS and RNU4ATAC-related skeletal disorders.These findings expand the phenotypic spectrum of RNU4ATAC-related disorders to include a complex neurological-skeletal ciliopathy phenotype, and highlight the relevance of ES reanalysis to uncover non-coding variants often undetected by conventional diagnostics.
Journal Article
MicroRNA expression profile in retina and choroid in oxygen-induced retinopathy model
2019
Ischemic retinopathies (IRs) are leading causes of visual impairment. They are characterized by an initial phase of microvascular degeneration and a second phase of aberrant pre-retinal neovascularization (NV). microRNAs (miRNAs) regulate gene expression, and a number play a role in normal and pathological NV. But, post-transcriptional modulation of miRNAs in the eye during the development of IRs has not been systematically evaluated.
Using Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) we profiled miRNA expression in the retina and choroid during vasodegenerative and NV phases of oxygen-induced retinopathy (OIR).
Approximately 20% of total miRNAs exhibited altered expression (up- or down-regulation); 6% of miRNA were found highly expressed in retina and choroid of rats subjected to OIR. During OIR-induced vessel degeneration phase, miR-199a-3p, -199a-5p, -1b, -126a-3p displayed a robust decreased expression (> 85%) in the retina. While in the choroid, miR-152-3p, -142-3p, -148a-3p, -532-3p were upregulated (>200%) and miR-96-5p, -124-3p, -9a-3p, -190b-5p, -181a-1-3p, -9a-5p, -183-5p were downregulated (>70%) compared to controls. During peak pathological NV, miR-30a-5p, -30e-5p and 190b-5p were markedly reduced (>70%), and miR-30e-3p, miR-335, -30b-5p strongly augmented (by up to 300%) in the retina. Whereas in choroid, miR-let-7f-5p, miR-126a-5p and miR-101a-3p were downregulated by (>81%), and miR-125a-5p, let-7e-5p and let-7g-5p were upregulated by (>570%) during NV. Changes in miRNA observed using NGS were validated using qRT-PCR for the 24 most modulated miRNAs. In silico approach to predict miRNA target genes (using algorithms of miRSystem database) identified potential new target genes with pro-inflammatory, apoptotic and angiogenic properties.
The present study is the first comprehensive description of retinal/choroidal miRNAs profiling in OIR (using NGS technology). Our results provide a valuable framework for the characterization and possible therapeutic potential of specific miRNAs involved in ocular IR-triggered inflammation, angiogenesis and degeneration.
Journal Article
The Ciliopathy Protein CC2D2A Associates with NINL and Functions in RAB8-MICAL3-Regulated Vesicle Trafficking
by
van Wijk, Erwin
,
Tonnaer, Edith
,
Moens, Cecilia B.
in
Abnormalities, Multiple - genetics
,
Abnormalities, Multiple - metabolism
,
Abnormalities, Multiple - pathology
2015
Ciliopathies are a group of human disorders caused by dysfunction of primary cilia, ubiquitous microtubule-based organelles involved in transduction of extra-cellular signals to the cell. This function requires the concentration of receptors and channels in the ciliary membrane, which is achieved by complex trafficking mechanisms, in part controlled by the small GTPase RAB8, and by sorting at the transition zone located at the entrance of the ciliary compartment. Mutations in the transition zone gene CC2D2A cause the related Joubert and Meckel syndromes, two typical ciliopathies characterized by central nervous system malformations, and result in loss of ciliary localization of multiple proteins in various models. The precise mechanisms by which CC2D2A and other transition zone proteins control protein entrance into the cilium and how they are linked to vesicular trafficking of incoming cargo remain largely unknown. In this work, we identify the centrosomal protein NINL as a physical interaction partner of CC2D2A. NINL partially co-localizes with CC2D2A at the base of cilia and ninl knockdown in zebrafish leads to photoreceptor outer segment loss, mislocalization of opsins and vesicle accumulation, similar to cc2d2a-/- phenotypes. Moreover, partial ninl knockdown in cc2d2a-/- embryos enhances the retinal phenotype of the mutants, indicating a genetic interaction in vivo, for which an illustration is found in patients from a Joubert Syndrome cohort. Similar to zebrafish cc2d2a mutants, ninl morphants display altered Rab8a localization. Further exploration of the NINL-associated interactome identifies MICAL3, a protein known to interact with Rab8 and to play an important role in vesicle docking and fusion. Together, these data support a model where CC2D2A associates with NINL to provide a docking point for cilia-directed cargo vesicles, suggesting a mechanism by which transition zone proteins can control the protein content of the ciliary compartment.
Journal Article
A bird’s eye view on the use of whole exome sequencing in rare congenital ophthalmic diseases
by
Allegri, Lorenzo
,
Mio, Catia
,
Faletra, Flavio
in
Aniridia
,
Anterior Eye Segment - abnormalities
,
Anterior Eye Segment - pathology
2024
Phenotypic and genotypic heterogeneity in congenital ocular diseases, especially in anterior segment dysgenesis (ASD), have created challenges for proper diagnosis and classification of diseases. Over the last decade, genomic research has indeed boosted our understanding in the molecular basis of ASD and genes associated with both autosomal dominant and recessive patterns of inheritance have been described with a wide range of expressivity. Here we describe the molecular characterization of a cohort of 162 patients displaying isolated or syndromic congenital ocular dysgenesis. Samples were analyzed with diverse techniques, such as direct sequencing, multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification, and whole exome sequencing (WES), over 20 years. Our data reiterate the notion that PAX6 alterations are primarily associated with ASD, mostly aniridia, since the majority of the cohort (66.7%) has a pathogenic or likely pathogenic variant in the PAX6 locus. Unexpectedly, a high fraction of positive samples (20.3%) displayed deletions involving the 11p13 locus, either partially/totally involving PAX6 coding region or abolishing its critical regulatory region, underlying its significance. Most importantly, the use of WES has allowed us to both assess variants in known ASD genes (i.e., CYP1B1 , ITPR1 , MAB21L1 , PXDN , and PITX2 ) and to identify rarer phenotypes (i.e., MIDAS, oculogastrointestinal-neurodevelopmental syndrome and Jacobsen syndrome). Our data clearly suggest that WES allows expanding the analytical portfolio of ocular dysgenesis, both isolated and syndromic, and that is pivotal for the differential diagnosis of those conditions in which there may be phenotypic overlaps and in general in ASD.
Journal Article
Characterization of a spontaneous microphthalmia-like mutant mouse with isolated ocular defects
2026
Microphthalmia is a significant eye defect owing to its profound effects on visual acuity. Microphthalmia accounts for 3.2%–11.2% of blind children. To date, there has been no cure for this disease. In this study, we aimed to identify microphthalmia-like mutant mouse and study its growth and development. In this study, we identified mutant mice exhibiting eye abnormalities using a forward genetics approach in a C57BL/6J cohort. To identify ocular characteristics of the mutant mouse, we conducted systematic evaluations including basic measurements (body length, body weight, and palpebral fissure width), optical coherence tomography (OCT), optomotor response (OMR), and hematoxylin-eosin (H&E) staining. At early developmental stages, there are notable differences in body length and weight between mutant and normal mice. Mutant mice displayed microphthalmia-like phenotypes, characterized by significantly reduced eyeball and lens sizes as well as decreased anterior chamber depth compared to wild-type controls. Visual impairment was evident in the mutant mice. Mutant mice exhibited rosette-like structures in the retina without impacting other organs of the body. Overall, these results support microphthalmia-like mutant mouse as a valuable tool for studying this congenital ocular malformation.
Journal Article