Visual and ocular findings in a family with X-linked cone dysfunction and protanopia.

Ophthalmic Genet

Department of Paediatric Ophthalmology, Strabismus, Electrophysiology and Ocular Oncology, St. Erik Eye Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden.

Published: October 2021

: Bornholm eye disease (BED) is a rare X-linked cone dysfunction disorder with high myopia, amblyopia, and color vision defects. Visual and ocular outcomes in a family where two of five siblings had molecularly confirmed BED are reported. Ophthalmological assessments included best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA), color vision test, and optical coherence tomography (OCT). Medical records, electroretinography (ERG), and genetic analyses were re-evaluated. Two male siblings had confirmed BED with myopia and protanopia. The younger brother had high myopia, subnormal BCVA, and ocular fundi that showed tilted discs, crescent shaped peripapillary atrophy, and visible choroidal vessels. OCT confirmed retinal and choroidal atrophy. The older brother was lightly myopic with normal/subnormal BCVA and subtle findings in the fundi. Both brothers had abnormal ERG recordings with a decreased cone response. They also had a structurally intact gene cluster. The gene was shown to carry a deleterious variant combination in exon 3 known to result in mis-splicing of opsin mRNA and acknowledged as LIAVA amino acid delineation (Leu153-Ile171-Ala174-Val178-Ala180), while the gene exon 3 showed a non-pathogenic variant combination (MVVVA). Another normal-sighted brother carried another wildtype variant combination (LVAIS) in exon 3 of the gene. The two affected brothers demonstrated a large variability in their phenotypes even though the genotypes were identical. They presented a disease-associated haplotype in exon 3 of that has been described as the molecular cause of BED.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13816810.2021.1938139DOI Listing

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