Abstract

Purpose: Congenital cataract (CC) is a common disease resulting in leukocoria and the leading cause of blindness in children worldwide. Approximately 50% of congenital cataract is inherited. Our aim is to identify mutations in a Chinese family with congenital cataract. Methods: A four-generation Chinese family diagnosed with congenital cataract was recruited in West China Hospital of Sichuan University. Genomic DNA was extracted from the peripheral blood of these participants. All coding exons and flanking regions were amplified and sequenced, and the variants were validated using Sanger sequencing. AlphaFold2 was used to predict possible protein structural changes in this variant. Results: The proband had congenital nuclear cataract with nystagmus. A heterozygous variant c.233C > T was identified in exon 2 of the CRYGD gene in chromosome 2. This mutation resulted in a substitution of serine with phenylalanine at amino acid residue 78 (p.S78F). The variant might result in a less stable structure with a looser loop and broken hydrogen bond predicted by AlphaFold2, and this mutation was co-segregated with the disease phenotype in this family. Conclusion: We described cases of human congenital cataract caused by a novel mutation in the CRYGD gene and provided evidence of further phenotypic heterogeneity associated with this variant. Our study further extends the mutation spectrum of the CRYGD gene in congenital cataract.

Highlights

  • As one of the most remediable causes of visual disability in childhood, congenital cataract is defined as the opacity of the lens onset from birth

  • Members of a four-generation Chinese family affected by autosomal dominant congenital cataract (ADCC) were analyzed from clinical and genetic perspectives

  • We have registered this novel mutation in ClinVar database, and the accession number is SCV002044295

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Summary

Introduction

As one of the most remediable causes of visual disability in childhood, congenital cataract is defined as the opacity of the lens onset from birth. Most vision loss associated with congenital cataract is due to amblyopia (Mansouri et al, 2013), and others are due to postoperative complications such as secondary glaucoma and retinal detachment either from birth or in early infancy (Chak and Rahi, 2008; Koch et al, 2019; Wang et al, 2020). AD is the most common mode of inheritance, followed by XR (Shiels and Hejtmancik, 2017). Because it is not fatal and would not affect fertility, inherited congenital cataract maintains a relatively high penetrance, and the pathogenic gene can be continuously passed on from generation to generation

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