Autosomal dominant nanophthalmos and high hyperopia associated with a C-terminal frameshift variant in MYRF
Autosomal dominant nanophthalmos and high hyperopia associated with a C-terminal frameshift variant in MYRF
Date
2019-09-21
Authors
Siggs, Owen M
Souzeau, Emmanuelle
Breen, James
Qassim, Ayub
Zhou, Tiger
Dubowsky, Andrew
Ruddle, Jonathan B
Craig, Jamie E
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Molecular Vision
Abstract
Purpose: Nanophthalmos is a rare subtype of microphthalmia associated with high hyperopia and an increased risk of angle-closure glaucoma. We investigated the genetic cause of nanophthalmos and high hyperopia in an autosomal dominant kindred. Methods: A proband with short axial length, high hyperopia, and dextrocardia was subjected to exome sequencing. Human and rodent gene expression data sets were used to investigate the expression of relevant genes. Results: We identified a segregating heterozygous frameshift variant at the 3′ end of the penultimate exon of MYRF. Using Myc-MYRF chromatin immunoprecipitation data from rat oligodendrocytes, MYRF was found to bind immediately upstream of the transcriptional start site of Tmem98, a gene that itself has been implicated in autosomal dominant nanophthalmos. MYRF and TMEM98 were found to be expressed in the human retina, with a similar pattern of expression across several dissected human eye tissues. Conclusions: C-terminal variants in MYRF, which are expected to escape nonsense-mediated decay, represent a rare cause of autosomal dominant nanophthalmos with or without dextrocardia or congenital diaphragmatic hernia.
Description
Made available with a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License 3.0, or CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 (see http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ for license terms). Copyright (2019) The authors.
Keywords
Nanophthalmos,
microphthalmia,
angle-closure glaucoma
Citation
Siggs, O. M., Souzeau, E., Breen, J., Qassim, A., Zhou, T., Dubowsky, A., ... Craig, J. E. (2019). Autosomal dominant nanophthalmos and high hyperopia associated with a C-terminal frameshift variant in MYRF. Molecular Vision, 25, 527-534.