Abstract

We present the clinical and molecular genetic features of a large multi-generation Norwegian family with dominant cone-rod dystrophy. Ophthalmological evaluation including electroretinography showed cone dysfunction in younger patients, with rod dysfunction becoming apparent at more advanced stages of the disease. In one branch of the family, cone degeneration remained the only manifestation despite advancing age. Linkage analysis mapped the disease gene in this family to 17p12-p13, a chromosome region previously linked to cone-rod dystrophy in a Swedish family ( CORD5 ). A maximum LOD score of 3.25 (? = 0.00) for marker D17S1844 was obtained. Mutation analysis of the guanylate cyclase 2D gene ( GUCY2D , MIM 600179, previously called RETGC1 ), located at 17p12-p13, showed a missense mutation (R838C) in exon 13, that co-segregated with the eye disease in the family. Our suspicion of the possibility of an interrelationship between the Swedish CORD5 family and the present family, both originating from Northern Scandinavia, initiated the linkage analysis in the Norwegian family. The R838C missense mutation was not, however, detected in the Swedish patients, strongly suggesting no relationship between these two families. The long-term ophthalmological evaluation in this large four-generation family, combined with the identification of the disease-causing mutation, provide critical information for refining the classification, prognosis, and genetic counselling of patients with cone-rod dystrophies.

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