A 5-bp deletion in ELOVL4 is associated with two related forms of autosomal dominant macular dystrophy

K Zhang, M Kniazeva, M Han, W Li, Z Yu, Z Yang, Y Li… - Nature …, 2001 - nature.com
K Zhang, M Kniazeva, M Han, W Li, Z Yu, Z Yang, Y Li, ML Metzker, R Allikmets, DJ Zack
Nature genetics, 2001nature.com
Stargardt-like macular dystrophy (STGD3, MIM 600110) and autosomal dominant macular
dystrophy (adMD) are inherited forms of macular degeneration characterized by decreased
visual acuity, macular atrophy and extensive fundus flecks 1, 2, 3. Genetic mapping data
suggest that mutations in a single gene may be responsible for both conditions, already
known to bear clinical resemblance 1, 2, 3. Here we limit the minimum genetic region for
STGD3 and adMD to a 0.6-cM interval by recombination breakpoint mapping and identify a …
Abstract
Stargardt-like macular dystrophy (STGD3, MIM 600110) and autosomal dominant macular dystrophy (adMD) are inherited forms of macular degeneration characterized by decreased visual acuity, macular atrophy and extensive fundus flecks 1, 2, 3. Genetic mapping data suggest that mutations in a single gene may be responsible for both conditions, already known to bear clinical resemblance 1, 2, 3. Here we limit the minimum genetic region for STGD3 and adMD to a 0.6-cM interval by recombination breakpoint mapping and identify a single 5-bp deletion within the protein-coding region of a new retinal photoreceptor-specific gene, ELOVL4, in all affected members of STGD3 and adMD families. Bioinformatic analysis of ELOVL4 revealed that it has homology to a group of yeast proteins that function in the biosynthesis of very long chain fatty acids. Our results are therefore the first to implicate the biosynthesis of fatty acids in the pathogenesis of inherited macular degeneration.
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