Mutation in the auxiliary calcium-channel subunit CACNA2D4 causes autosomal recessive cone dystrophy

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Abstract

Retinal signal transmission depends on the activity of high voltage-gated L-type calcium channels in photoreceptor ribbon synapses. We recently identified a truncating frameshift mutation in the Cacna2d4 gene in a spontaneous mouse mutant with profound loss of retinal signaling and an abnormal morphology of ribbon synapses in rods and cones. The Cacna2d4 gene encodes an L-type calcium-channel auxiliary subunit of the α2δ type. Mutations in its human orthologue, CACNA2D4, were not yet known to be associated with a disease. We performed mutation analyses of 34 patients who received an initial diagnosis of night blindness, and, in two affected siblings, we detected a homozygous nucleotide substitution (c.2406C→A) in CACNA2D4. The mutation introduces a premature stop codon that truncates one-third of the corresponding open reading frame. Both patients share symptoms of slowly progressing cone dystrophy. These findings represent the first report of a mutation in the human CACNA2D4 gene and define a novel gene defect that causes autosomal recessive cone dystrophy. © 2006 by The American Society of Human Genetics. All rights reserved.

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Wycisk, K. A., Zeitz, C., Feil, S., Wittmer, M., Forster, U., Neidhardt, J., … Berger, W. (2006). Mutation in the auxiliary calcium-channel subunit CACNA2D4 causes autosomal recessive cone dystrophy. American Journal of Human Genetics, 79(5), 973–977. https://doi.org/10.1086/508944

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