Abstract

Background: Stargardt disease (STGD) is the most common form of juvenile macular dystrophy associated with progressive central vision loss, and is agenetically and clinically heterogeneous disease. Molecular diagnosis is of great significance in aiding the clinical diagnosis, helping to determine the phenotypic severity and visual prognosis. In the present study, we determined the clinical and genetic features of seven childhood-onset and three adult-onset Chinese STGD families. We performed capture next-generation sequencing (NGS) of the probands and searched for potentially disease-causing genetic variants in previously identified retinal or macular dystrophy genes.Methods: In all, ten unrelated Chinese families were enrolled. Panel-based NGS was performed to identify potentially disease-causing genetic variants in previously identified retinal or macular dystrophy genes, including the five known STGD genes (ABCA4, PROM1, PRPH2, VMD2, and ELOVL4). Variant analysis, Sanger validation, and segregation tests were utilized to validate the disease-causing mutations in these families.Results: Using systematic data analysis with an established bioinformatics pipeline and segregation analysis, 17 pathogenic mutations in ABCA4 were identified in the 10 STGD families. Four of these mutations were novel: c.371delG, c.681T > G, c.5509C > T, and EX37del. Childhood-onset STGD was associated with severe visual loss, generalized retinal dysfunction and was due to more severe variants in ABCA4 than those found in adult-onset disease.Conclusions: We expand the existing spectrum of STGD and reveal the genotype–phenotype relationships of the ABCA4 mutations in Chinese patients. Childhood-onset STGD lies at the severe end of the spectrum of ABCA4-associated retinal phenotypes.

Highlights

  • Stargardt disease (STGD; MIM 248200) is the most common inherited juvenile onset macular dystrophy, with a prevalence of approximately 1:8000 to 1:10000, depending on the population studied [1,2]

  • We successfully identified 17 ABCA4 mutations associated with STGD in ten Chinese families and detailed their genetic and clinical characteristics

  • We found that childhood-onset STGD patients were associated with severe visual loss, generalized retinal dysfunction, and had more severe variants of ABCA4 than those found in adult-onset disease

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Summary

Introduction

Stargardt disease (STGD; MIM 248200) is the most common inherited juvenile onset macular dystrophy, with a prevalence of approximately 1:8000 to 1:10000, depending on the population studied [1,2]. It is characterized by a decrease in central vision and the presence of bilateral atrophic-appearing foveal lesions. Stargardt disease (STGD) is the most common form of juvenile macular dystrophy associated with progressive central vision loss, and is agenetically and clinically heterogeneous disease. Panel-based NGS was performed to identify potentially disease-causing genetic variants in previously identified retinal or macular dystrophy genes, including the five known STGD genes (ABCA4, PROM1, PRPH2, VMD2, and ELOVL4). Childhood-onset STGD lies at the severe end of the spectrum of ABCA4-associated retinal phenotypes

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