ABCA4 p.Leu244Pro
ClinVar: |
c.731T>C
,
p.Leu244Pro
?
, not provided
|
Predicted by SNAP2: | A: N (53%), C: N (61%), D: D (71%), E: D (53%), F: N (66%), G: D (71%), H: N (57%), I: N (93%), K: D (53%), M: N (93%), N: D (59%), P: D (91%), Q: N (57%), R: D (59%), S: D (53%), T: N (61%), V: N (82%), W: D (63%), Y: N (72%), |
Predicted by PROVEAN: | A: D, C: D, D: D, E: D, F: N, G: D, H: D, I: N, K: D, M: N, N: D, P: D, Q: D, R: D, S: D, T: D, V: N, W: D, Y: N, |
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[hide] ABCA4 disease progression and a proposed strategy ... Hum Mol Genet. 2009 Mar 1;18(5):931-41. Epub 2008 Dec 12. Cideciyan AV, Swider M, Aleman TS, Tsybovsky Y, Schwartz SB, Windsor EA, Roman AJ, Sumaroka A, Steinberg JD, Jacobson SG, Stone EM, Palczewski K
ABCA4 disease progression and a proposed strategy for gene therapy.
Hum Mol Genet. 2009 Mar 1;18(5):931-41. Epub 2008 Dec 12., [PMID:19074458]
Abstract [show]
Autosomal recessive retinal diseases caused by mutations in the ABCA4 gene are being considered for gene replacement therapy. All individuals with ABCA4-disease show macular degeneration, but only some are thought to progress to retina-wide blindness. It is currently not predictable if or when specific ABCA4 genotypes will show extramacular disease, and how fast it will progress thereafter. Early clinical trials of focal subretinal gene therapy will aim to arrest disease progression in the extramacular retina. In 66 individuals with known disease-causing ABCA4 alleles, we defined retina-wide disease expression by measuring rod- and cone-photoreceptor-mediated vision. Serial measurements over a mean period of 8.7 years were consistent with a model wherein a normal plateau phase of variable length was followed by initiation of retina-wide disease that progressed exponentially. Once initiated, the mean rate of disease progression was 1.1 log/decade for rods and 0.45 log/decade for cones. Spatio-temporal progression of disease could be described as the sum of two components, one with a central-to-peripheral gradient and the other with a uniform retina-wide pattern. Estimates of the age of disease initiation were used as a severity metric and contributions made by each ABCA4 allele were predicted. One-third of the non-truncating alleles were found to cause more severe disease than premature truncations supporting the existence of a pathogenic component beyond simple loss of function. Genotype-based inclusion/exclusion criteria and prediction of the age of retina-wide disease initiation will be invaluable for selecting appropriate candidates for clinical trials in ABCA4 disease.
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No. Sentence Comment
36 More severe macular disease consisted of a near-complete loss of the lipofuscin signal and atrophy of the macular RPE surrounded by additional smaller patches of atrophy as illustrated by P56, a compound heterozygote for A1598D and R1640Q alleles (Fig. 1D) or by P16, a homozygote for the L244P allele (Fig. 1E).
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ABCA4 p.Leu244Pro 19074458:36:289
status: NEW126 For four missense mutations occurring homozygously (L244P, R220C, N965S and P1380L), we assumed that each allele contributed equally to disease severity.
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ABCA4 p.Leu244Pro 19074458:126:52
status: NEW151 Estimated severity of ABCA4 alleles and their properties ABCA4 allele Delay of retina-wide disease initiation (years)a In vitro or in vivo studiesb Molecular structural localizationc C2150Y 225.8 NBD-2 A1038V;L541P 214.0 35, 38 ECD-1/NBD-1 IVS38-10 T.C 211.1 L244P 25.7 ECD-1 E1122K 23.5 NBD-1 C54Y 22.1 35 ECD-1 IVS35þ2 T.C 22.1 R602W 21.8 38 ECD-1 V1896D 21.8 TM12 L1940P 21.4 NBD-2 Truncation mutationsd 0.0 E1087D 2.8 NBD-1 R220C 3.9 ECD-1 A1598D 3.9 ECD-2 R1640Q 3.9 ECD-2 R1098C 4.9 NBD-1 P1380L 7.4 35 TM7 N965S 7.6 35 NBD-1 V1433I 8.6 ECD-2 R1108C 10.4 35 NBD-1 T1526M 14.5 35 ECD-2 R2030Q 14.5 NBD-2 L2027F 15.1 35,37 NBD-2 G818E 17.3 35 TM5/TM6 S100P 18.2 ECD-1 L1201R 18.2 NBD-1 R18W 18.5 Nt D600E 18.5 ECD-1 L11P 21.7 Nt D654N 25.3 36 ECD-1 K2172R 27.9 NBD-2 IVS40þ5 G.A 28.1 G1961E 37.9 35 NBD-2 G1961R 44.0 NBD-2 a Delay of retina-wide disease initiation relative to the standard of age 10.6 years.
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ABCA4 p.Leu244Pro 19074458:151:259
status: NEW[hide] ABCA4 gene analysis in patients with autosomal rec... Eur J Hum Genet. 2008 Jul;16(7):812-9. Epub 2008 Feb 20. Kitiratschky VB, Grau T, Bernd A, Zrenner E, Jagle H, Renner AB, Kellner U, Rudolph G, Jacobson SG, Cideciyan AV, Schaich S, Kohl S, Wissinger B
ABCA4 gene analysis in patients with autosomal recessive cone and cone rod dystrophies.
Eur J Hum Genet. 2008 Jul;16(7):812-9. Epub 2008 Feb 20., [PMID:18285826]
Abstract [show]
The ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters constitute a family of large membrane proteins, which transport a variety of substrates across membranes. The ABCA4 protein is expressed in photoreceptors and possibly functions as a transporter for N-retinylidene-phosphatidylethanolamine (N-retinylidene-PE), the Schiff base adduct of all-trans-retinal with PE. Mutations in the ABCA4 gene have been initially associated with autosomal recessive Stargardt disease. Subsequent studies have shown that mutations in ABCA4 can also cause a variety of other retinal dystrophies including cone rod dystrophy and retinitis pigmentosa. To determine the prevalence and mutation spectrum of ABCA4 gene mutations in non-Stargardt phenotypes, we have screened 64 unrelated patients with autosomal recessive cone (arCD) and cone rod dystrophy (arCRD) applying the Asper Ophthalmics ABCR400 microarray followed by DNA sequencing of all coding exons of the ABCA4 gene in subjects with single heterozygous mutations. Disease-associated ABCA4 alleles were identified in 20 of 64 patients with arCD or arCRD. In four of 64 patients (6%) only one mutant ABCA4 allele was detected and in 16 patients (25%), mutations on both ABCA4 alleles were identified. Based on these data we estimate a prevalence of 31% for ABCA4 mutations in arCD and arCRD, supporting the concept that the ABCA4 gene is a major locus for various types of degenerative retinal diseases with abnormalities in cone or both cone and rod function.
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No. Sentence Comment
70 of alleles Reference Missense: 6 c.731T4Ca p.L244P 2 23 12 c.1622T4Cb p.L541P 1 5 13 c.1928T4G p.V643G 1 9 17 c.2588G4C p.G863A and p.G863del 2 4 21 c.3113C4Tb p.A1038V 1 4 25 c.3608G4A p.G1203E 1 24 28 c.4139C4T p.P1380L 2 25 30 c.4457C4T p.P1486L 1 25 30 c.4462T4C p.C1488R 1 25 37 c.5285C4A p.A1762D 1 24 41 c.5819T4C p.L1940P 1 26 42 c.5882G4A p.G1961E 1 9 45 c.6148G4C p.V2050L 1 25 45 c.6229C4T p.R2077W 1 25 Nonsense: 6 c.700C4T p.Q234X 1 This study 6 c.735T4G p.Y245X 2 24 28 c.4234C4T p.Q1412X 1 10 Deletion: 24 c.3539_3554del p.S1181PfsX8 1 This study 43 c.5917delG p.V1973X 3 27 Splice site/intronic: 26 c.5196+1G4A Splicing 1 9 34 c.4848+2T4C Splicing 1 This study 36 c.5196+1_5196+4del Splicing 1 15 39 c.5461À10T4C Unknown 8 14 40 c.5714+5G4A Splicing?
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ABCA4 p.Leu244Pro 18285826:70:45
status: NEW99 Another arCRD patient (RCD9/ 1989) harbours two mutations (p.P1380L and p.R2077W) which are both characterised by substantially impaired ATP-binding.32 A fourth arCRD patient (RCD92/6809) is homozygous for the missense mutation p.L244P.
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ABCA4 p.Leu244Pro 18285826:99:230
status: NEW100 Interestingly, a patient who is also a homozygote for p.L244P, but suffers from Stargardt disease has been described in the literature.23 Moreover, there is no higher proportion of nonsense or truncating mutations in our sample of CRD and CD patients compared with that of a cohort comprised of Stargardt patients only.27 Yet, we noted that certain mutations which are highly prevalent in Stargardt patients (recruited from a comparable population),27 for example, the c.5882G4A, the c.3113C4T, and c.2588G4C mutations were rare in our sample; in contrast, the c.5461À10T4C variant is less common in Stargardt patients.
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ABCA4 p.Leu244Pro 18285826:100:56
status: NEW[hide] Mutations in ABCR (ABCA4) in patients with Stargar... Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci. 2001 Sep;42(10):2229-36. Briggs CE, Rucinski D, Rosenfeld PJ, Hirose T, Berson EL, Dryja TP
Mutations in ABCR (ABCA4) in patients with Stargardt macular degeneration or cone-rod degeneration.
Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci. 2001 Sep;42(10):2229-36., [PMID:11527935]
Abstract [show]
PURPOSE: To determine the spectrum of ABCR mutations associated with Stargardt macular degeneration and cone-rod degeneration (CRD). METHODS: One hundred eighteen unrelated patients with recessive Stargardt macular degeneration and eight with recessive CRD were screened for mutations in ABCR (ABCA4) by single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis. Variants were characterized by direct genomic sequencing. Segregation analysis was performed on the families of 20 patients in whom at least two or more likely pathogenic sequence changes were identified. RESULTS: The authors found 77 sequence changes likely to be pathogenic: 21 null mutations (15 novel), 55 missense changes (26 novel), and one deletion of a consensus glycosylation site (also novel). Fifty-two patients with Stargardt macular degeneration (44% of those screened) and five with CRD each had two of these sequence changes or were homozygous for one of them. Segregation analyses in the families of 19 of these patients were informative and revealed that the index cases and all available affected siblings were compound heterozygotes or homozygotes. The authors found one instance of an apparently de novo mutation, Ile824Thr, in a patient. Thirty-seven (31%) of the 118 patients with Stargardt disease and one with CRD had only one likely pathogenic sequence change. Twenty-nine patients with Stargardt disease (25%) and two with CRD had no identified sequence changes. CONCLUSIONS: This report of 42 novel mutations brings the growing number of identified likely pathogenic sequence changes in ABCR to approximately 250.
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No. Sentence Comment
81 An additional three with Stargardt and two with CRD were homozygotes for a likely pathogenic sequence change (Leu244Pro, Pro1380Leu, Arg1640Gln, Cys2150Tyr, or Val1973[delG]).
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ABCA4 p.Leu244Pro 11527935:81:110
status: NEW80 An additional three with Stargardt and two with CRD were homozygotes for a likely pathogenic sequence change (Leu244Pro, Pro1380Leu, Arg1640Gln, Cys2150Tyr, or Val1973[delG]).
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ABCA4 p.Leu244Pro 11527935:80:110
status: NEW