Abstract

PurposeFamilial exudative vitreoretinopathy (FEVR) is a blindness-causing retinal vascular disease characterized by incomplete vascularization of the peripheral retina and by the absence or abnormality of the second/tertiary capillary layers in the deep retina. Variants in known FEVR disease genes can only explain about 50% of FEVR-affected cases. We aim to identify additional disease genes in patients with FEVR. MethodsWe applied exome sequencing analysis in a cohort of 49 FEVR families without pathogenic variants in known FEVR genes. Functions of the affected proteins were evaluated by reporter assay. Knockout mouse models were generated by endothelial-specific Cre line. ResultsThree novel rare heterozygous variants in Notch ligand JAG1 were identified in FEVR families—c.413C>T p. (A138V), c.1415G>A p. (R472H), and c.2884A>G p. (T962A)—and verified by Sanger sequencing analysis. Notch reporter assay revealed that mutant JAG1 proteins JAG1-A138V and JAG1-T962A lost almost all of their activities, and JAG1-R472H lost approximately 50% of its activity. Deletion of Jag1 in mouse endothelial cells resulted in reduced tip cells at the angiogenic front and retarded vessel growth, reproducing FEVR-like phenotypes. ConclusionOur data suggest that JAG1 is a novel candidate gene for FEVR and pinpoints a potential target for therapeutic intervention.

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