Entry - #612712 - LEBER CONGENITAL AMAUROSIS 13; LCA13 - OMIM
# 612712

LEBER CONGENITAL AMAUROSIS 13; LCA13


Other entities represented in this entry:

RETINITIS PIGMENTOSA 53, INCLUDED; RP53, INCLUDED

Phenotype-Gene Relationships

Location Phenotype Phenotype
MIM number
Inheritance Phenotype
mapping key
Gene/Locus Gene/Locus
MIM number
14q24.1 Leber congenital amaurosis 13 612712 AD, AR 3 RDH12 608830
Clinical Synopsis
 
Phenotypic Series
 

INHERITANCE
- Autosomal dominant (in one RP53 family)
- Autosomal recessive
HEAD & NECK
Eyes
- Retinal dystrophy (rods and cones affected), early onset
- Intraretinal bone spicule pigmentation
- Attenuation of retinal arterioles
- Legal blindness in early adulthood (in some patients)
- Preservation of central vision into later adulthood (in some patients)
MISCELLANEOUS
- Some patients with onset of severe disease in infancy are diagnosed with Leber congenital amaurosis, whereas other patients with childhood onset of less severe retinal dystrophy are diagnosed with retinitis pigmentosa
MOLECULAR BASIS
- Caused by mutation in the retinol dehydrogenase 12 gene (RDH12, 608830.0001)
Retinitis pigmentosa - PS268000 - 102 Entries
Location Phenotype Inheritance Phenotype
mapping key
Phenotype
MIM number
Gene/Locus Gene/Locus
MIM number
1p36.11 Retinitis pigmentosa 59 AR 3 613861 DHDDS 608172
1p36.11 ?Congenital disorder of glycosylation, type 1bb AR 3 613861 DHDDS 608172
1p34.1 Retinitis pigmentosa 76 AR 3 617123 POMGNT1 606822
1p31.3 Retinitis pigmentosa 20 AR 3 613794 RPE65 180069
1p31.3 Retinitis pigmentosa 87 with choroidal involvement AD 3 618697 RPE65 180069
1p22.1 Retinitis pigmentosa 19 AR 3 601718 ABCA4 601691
1p13.3 Retinitis pigmentosa 32 AR 3 609913 CLCC1 617539
1q21.2 Retinitis pigmentosa 18 AD 3 601414 PRPF3 607301
1q22 Retinitis pigmentosa 35 AR 3 610282 SEMA4A 607292
1q31.3 Retinitis pigmentosa-12 AR 3 600105 CRB1 604210
1q32.3 ?Retinitis pigmentosa 67 AR 3 615565 NEK2 604043
1q41 Retinitis pigmentosa 39 AR 3 613809 USH2A 608400
2p23.3 Retinitis pigmentosa 75 AR 3 617023 AGBL5 615900
2p23.3 ?Retinitis pigmentosa 58 AR 3 613617 ZNF513 613598
2p23.3 Retinitis pigmentosa 71 AR 3 616394 IFT172 607386
2p23.2 Retinitis pigmentosa 54 AR 3 613428 PCARE 613425
2p15 Retinitis pigmentosa 28 AR 3 606068 FAM161A 613596
2q11.2 Retinitis pigmentosa 33 AD 3 610359 SNRNP200 601664
2q13 Retinitis pigmentosa 38 AR 3 613862 MERTK 604705
2q31.3 Retinitis pigmentosa 26 AR 3 608380 CERKL 608381
2q37.1 Retinitis pigmentosa 96, autosomal dominant AD 3 620228 SAG 181031
2q37.1 Retinitis pigmentosa 47, autosomal recessive AR 3 613758 SAG 181031
3q11.2 Retinitis pigmentosa 55 AR 3 613575 ARL6 608845
3q12.3 Retinitis pigmentosa 56 AR 3 613581 IMPG2 607056
3q22.1 Retinitis pigmentosa 4, autosomal dominant or recessive AD, AR 3 613731 RHO 180380
3q25.1 Retinitis pigmentosa 61 3 614180 CLRN1 606397
3q26.2 Retinitis pigmentosa 68 AR 3 615725 SLC7A14 615720
4p16.3 Retinitis pigmentosa-40 AR 3 613801 PDE6B 180072
4p15.32 Retinitis pigmentosa 93 AR 3 619845 CC2D2A 612013
4p15.32 Retinitis pigmentosa 41 AR 3 612095 PROM1 604365
4p12 Retinitis pigmentosa 49 AR 3 613756 CNGA1 123825
4q32-q34 Retinitis pigmentosa 29 AR 2 612165 RP29 612165
5q32 Retinitis pigmentosa 43 AR 3 613810 PDE6A 180071
6p24.2 Retinitis pigmentosa 62 AR 3 614181 MAK 154235
6p21.31 Retinitis pigmentosa 14 AR 3 600132 TULP1 602280
6p21.1 Retinitis pigmentosa 48 AD 3 613827 GUCA1B 602275
6p21.1 Leber congenital amaurosis 18 AD, AR, DD 3 608133 PRPH2 179605
6p21.1 Retinitis pigmentosa 7 and digenic form AD, AR, DD 3 608133 PRPH2 179605
6q12 Retinitis pigmentosa 25 AR 3 602772 EYS 612424
6q14.1 Retinitis pigmentosa 91 AD 3 153870 IMPG1 602870
6q23 Retinitis pigmentosa 63 AD 2 614494 RP63 614494
7p21.1 ?Retinitis pigmentosa 85 AR 3 618345 AHR 600253
7p15.3 Retinitis pigmentosa 42 AD 3 612943 KLHL7 611119
7p14.3 ?Retinitis pigmentosa 9 AD 3 180104 RP9 607331
7q32.1 Retinitis pigmentosa 10 AD 3 180105 IMPDH1 146690
7q34 Retinitis pigmentosa 86 AR 3 618613 KIAA1549 613344
8p23.1 Retinitis pigmentosa 88 AR 3 618826 RP1L1 608581
8p11.21-p11.1 Retinitis pigmentosa 73 AR 3 616544 HGSNAT 610453
8q11.23-q12.1 Retinitis pigmentosa 1 AD, AR 3 180100 RP1 603937
8q22.1 Cone-rod dystrophy 16 AR 3 614500 CFAP418 614477
8q22.1 Retinitis pigmentosa 64 AR 3 614500 CFAP418 614477
9p21.1 Retinitis pigmentosa 31 AD 3 609923 TOPORS 609507
9q32 Retinitis pigmentosa 70 AD 3 615922 PRPF4 607795
10q11.22 ?Retinitis pigmentosa 66 AR 3 615233 RBP3 180290
10q22.1 Retinitis pigmentosa 92 AR 3 619614 HKDC1 617221
10q22.1 Retinitis pigmentosa 79 AD 3 617460 HK1 142600
10q23.1 Retinitis pigmentosa 65 AR 3 613660 CDHR1 609502
10q23.1 Cone-rod dystrophy 15 AR 3 613660 CDHR1 609502
10q23.1 Macular dystrophy, retinal AR 3 613660 CDHR1 609502
10q23.1 Retinitis pigmentosa 44 3 613769 RGR 600342
10q24.32 Retinitis pigmentosa 83 AD 3 618173 ARL3 604695
11p11.2 Retinitis pigmentosa 72 AR 3 616469 ZNF408 616454
11q12.2 Retinitis pigmentosa 98 AR 3 620996 TMEM216 613277
11q12.3 Retinitis pigmentosa, concentric 3 613194 BEST1 607854
11q12.3 Retinitis pigmentosa-50 3 613194 BEST1 607854
11q12.3 Retinitis pigmentosa 7, digenic form AD, AR, DD 3 608133 ROM1 180721
13q14.11 ?Retinitis pigmentosa 97 AD 3 620422 VWA8 617509
14q11.2-q12 Retinitis pigmentosa 27 AD 3 613750 NRL 162080
14q24.1 Leber congenital amaurosis 13 AD, AR 3 612712 RDH12 608830
14q24.3 ?Retinitis pigmentosa 81 AR 3 617871 IFT43 614068
14q31.3 Leber congenital amaurosis 3 AR 3 604232 SPATA7 609868
14q31.3 Retinitis pigmentosa 94, variable age at onset, autosomal recessive AR 3 604232 SPATA7 609868
14q31.3 ?Retinitis pigmentosa 51 AR 3 613464 TTC8 608132
15q23 Retinitis pigmentosa 37 AD, AR 3 611131 NR2E3 604485
15q25.1 Retinitis pigmentosa 90 AR 3 619007 IDH3A 601149
16p13.3 Retinitis pigmentosa 80 AR 3 617781 IFT140 614620
16p12.3-p12.1 Retinitis pigmentosa 22 2 602594 RP22 602594
16q13 Retinitis pigmentosa 74 AR 3 616562 BBS2 606151
16q13 Retinitis pigmentosa 82 with or without situs inversus AR 3 615434 ARL2BP 615407
16q21 Retinitis pigmentosa 45 AR 3 613767 CNGB1 600724
16q22.2 Retinitis pigmentosa 84 AR 3 618220 DHX38 605584
17p13.3 Retinitis pigmentosa 13 AD 3 600059 PRPF8 607300
17q23.2 Retinitis pigmentosa 17 AD 4 600852 RP17 600852
17q25.1 Retinitis pigmentosa 36 3 610599 PRCD 610598
17q25.3 Retinitis pigmentosa 30 3 607921 FSCN2 607643
17q25.3 Retinitis pigmentosa 57 AR 3 613582 PDE6G 180073
19p13.3 Retinitis pigmentosa 77 AR 3 617304 REEP6 609346
19p13.3 Retinitis pigmentosa 95 AR 3 620102 RAX2 610362
19p13.2 Retinitis pigmentosa 78 AR 3 617433 ARHGEF18 616432
19q13.42 Retinitis pigmentosa 11 AD 3 600138 PRPF31 606419
20p13 Retinitis pigmentosa 46 AR 3 612572 IDH3B 604526
20p11.23 Retinitis pigmentosa 69 AR 3 615780 KIZ 615757
20q11.21 Retinitis pigmentosa 89 AD 3 618955 KIF3B 603754
20q13.33 Retinitis pigmentosa 60 AD 3 613983 PRPF6 613979
Xp22.2 ?Retinitis pigmentosa 23 XLR 3 300424 OFD1 300170
Xp21.3-p21.2 ?Retinitis pigmentosa, X-linked recessive, 6 XL 2 312612 RP6 312612
Xp11.4 Retinitis pigmentosa 3 XL 3 300029 RPGR 312610
Xp11.3 Retinitis pigmentosa 2 XL 3 312600 RP2 300757
Xq26-q27 Retinitis pigmentosa 24 2 300155 RP24 300155
Xq28 Retinitis pigmentosa 34 2 300605 RP34 300605
Chr.Y Retinitis pigmentosa, Y-linked YL 2 400004 RPY 400004
Not Mapped Retinitis pigmentosa AR 268000 RP 268000
Leber congenital amaurosis - PS204000 - 26 Entries
Location Phenotype Inheritance Phenotype
mapping key
Phenotype
MIM number
Gene/Locus Gene/Locus
MIM number
1p36.22 Leber congenital amaurosis 9 AR 3 608553 NMNAT1 608700
1p31.3 Leber congenital amaurosis 2 AR 3 204100 RPE65 180069
1q31.3 Leber congenital amaurosis 8 AR 3 613835 CRB1 604210
1q32.3 Leber congenital amaurosis 12 AR 3 610612 RD3 180040
2q37.1 Leber congenital amaurosis 16 AR 3 614186 KCNJ13 603208
4q32.1 Retinal dystrophy, early-onset severe AR 3 613341 LRAT 604863
4q32.1 Leber congenital amaurosis 14 AR 3 613341 LRAT 604863
4q32.1 Retinitis pigmentosa, juvenile AR 3 613341 LRAT 604863
6p21.31 Leber congenital amaurosis 15 AR 3 613843 TULP1 602280
6p21.1 Leber congenital amaurosis 18 AD, AR, DD 3 608133 PRPH2 179605
6p21.1 Retinitis pigmentosa 7 and digenic form AD, AR, DD 3 608133 PRPH2 179605
6q14.1 Leber congenital amaurosis 5 AR 3 604537 LCA5 611408
6q16.2 ?Leber congenital amaurosis 19 AR 3 618513 USP45 618439
7q32.1 Leber congenital amaurosis 11 AD 3 613837 IMPDH1 146690
8q22.1 Leber congenital amaurosis 17 AR 3 615360 GDF6 601147
11q12.3 Retinitis pigmentosa 7, digenic form AD, AR, DD 3 608133 ROM1 180721
12q21.32 Leber congenital amaurosis 10 3 611755 CEP290 610142
14q11.2 Leber congenital amaurosis 6 AR 3 613826 RPGRIP1 605446
14q24.1 Leber congenital amaurosis 13 AD, AR 3 612712 RDH12 608830
14q31.3 Retinitis pigmentosa 94, variable age at onset, autosomal recessive AR 3 604232 SPATA7 609868
14q31.3 Leber congenital amaurosis 3 AR 3 604232 SPATA7 609868
17p13.2 Retinitis pigmentosa, juvenile AD, AR 3 604393 AIPL1 604392
17p13.2 Leber congenital amaurosis 4 AD, AR 3 604393 AIPL1 604392
17p13.2 Cone-rod dystrophy AD, AR 3 604393 AIPL1 604392
17p13.1 Leber congenital amaurosis 1 AR 3 204000 GUCY2D 600179
19q13.33 Leber congenital amaurosis 7 3 613829 CRX 602225

TEXT

A number sign (#) is used with this entry because Leber congenital amaurosis-13 (LCA13) is caused by homozygous or compound heterozygous mutation in the photoreceptor-specific retinal dehydrogenase gene RDH12 (608830) on chromosome 14q24.

Heterozygous or homozygous mutation in RDH12 has also been shown to cause a form of retinitis pigmentosa (RP53).

For a general phenotypic description and a discussion of genetic heterogeneity of Leber congenital amaurosis, see 204000; for retinitis pigmentosa, see 268000.


Clinical Features

Janecke et al. (2004) reported 3 consanguineous Austrian kindreds segregating Leber congenital amaurosis. Affected individuals in these families, as well as 2 Austrian individuals with sporadic LCA and 3 non-Austrian individuals with LCA, carried mutations in the RDH12 gene (see MOLECULAR GENETICS). All patients harboring RDH12 mutations had a severe yet progressive rod-cone dystrophy with severe macular atrophy but no or mild hyperopia. All individuals with RDH12-related LCA demonstrated onset of symptoms in early childhood (2-4 years) and progression to legal blindness in early adulthood (18-25 years). Both rods and cones were affected. Fundi showed pronounced attenuation of retinal arterioles and intraretinal bone spicule pigmentation. The electroretinogram was extinguished at the time of first investigation (as early as 5 and 6 years of age in 2 of the individuals).

In a study of 4 patients with LCA13, Jacobson et al. (2007) found that the retinal architecture was appreciably distorted, precluding identification of the normal laminae. Although some of the RDH12-mutant retinas were remarkably thick and others thin, all had the same dysplastic pattern detectable in the first decade of life. The authors noted that these findings contrast with those in RPE65 (180069)-mutant retinas in LCA2 (204100) in which the retinal structure is relatively preserved.

Retinitis Pigmentosa 53

Fingert et al. (2008) studied 35 members of a 6-generation family segregating autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa and identified 19 clinically affected individuals who had retinal findings typical of RP, including intraretinal bone spicule-like pigmentation and attenuation of retinal arterioles. The average age at diagnosis was 28.5 years (range, 12-43 years). Some family members maintained excellent central visual acuity and driving privileges into their eighth decade of life.

Benayoun et al. (2009) described a large, highly consanguineous pedigree segregating autosomal recessive early-onset retinitis pigmentosa, affecting 17 individuals from 10 sibships. The age at diagnosis ranged from 18 months to 35 years, but most were diagnosed within the first decade of life. Most patients reported poor night vision, reduced central vision, and peripheral field loss. Both scotopic and photopic ERGs were markedly reduced or completely extinct, but there was some degree of phenotypic variability. Funduscopic findings in most individuals included typical bone spicule-type pigment deposits, attenuation of the retinal arterioles, and pale appearance of the optic disc.


Mapping

Janecke et al. (2004) performed a whole-genome scan in 3 consanguineous Austrian families segregating LCA and identified a founder haplotype and a critical interval of 1.53 cM on chromosome 14q23.3-q24.1 that overlapped with the LCA3 locus (604232).

Retinitis Pigmentosa 53

In a large 6-generation family segregating autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa, Fingert et al. (2008) performed genomewide linkage analysis in 8 affected individuals and identified a 15.2-Mb region of chromosome 14q with a maximum nonparametric multipoint linkage score of 19.97. Genotyping all 19 affected individuals from the pedigree confirmed the linkage and yielded a maximum 2-point lod score of 6.81 (theta = 0.0) with marker D14S587. Analysis of recombination events narrowed the critical region to a 21.7-cM (18.6-Mb) interval between markers D14S1018 and D14S251 containing 173 genes.

In a large, highly consanguineous pedigree segregating autosomal recessive early-onset retinitis pigmentosa, Benayoun et al. (2009) performed haplotype analysis in 1 sibship using markers linked to all known autosomal recessive RP loci and genes and found linkage to chromosome 14q24.1 (haplotype 'A;' maximum 2-point lod score of 3.0 for marker D14S1069 at theta = 0.0). Haplotype A segregated with disease in 8 of 10 sibships, but 3 affected individuals in 2 sibships did not carry haplotype A.


Molecular Genetics

In all affected family members studied from 3 kindreds with LCA13, as well as in 2 Austrian individuals with sporadic LCA13, Janecke et al. (2004) identified homozygosity for a tyr226-to-cys mutation in the RDH12 gene (Y226C; 608830.0001). Janecke et al. (2004) identified additional mutations in RDH12 in 3 of 89 non-Austrian individuals with LCA13: 806delCCCTG (608830.0002) and gln189 to ter (Q189X: 608830.0003), each in homozygous state, and thr49 to met (T49M; 608830.0004) and arg62 to ter (R62X; 608830.0005) in compound heterozygosity.

Perrault et al. (2004) studied a series of 110 unrelated patients with LCA; in 4.1% of the patients, they identified mutations in the RDH12 gene (see 608830.0001-608830.0002, 608830.0006-608830.0013). All patients harboring RDH12 mutations had a severe yet progressive rod-cone dystrophy with severe macular atrophy but no or mild hyperopia; Perrault et al. (2004) noted that this phenotype may represent the upper extreme of the spectrum of retinitis pigmentosa (RP; see 268000).

In a cohort of 1,011 individuals diagnosed with autosomal recessive retinal dystrophy, Thompson et al. (2005) identified 20 different disease-associated RDH12 mutations in a total of 22 individuals. Haplotype analysis suggested a founder mutation for each of the 3 common mutations: 806_810delCCCTG (608830.0002), L99I (608830.0010), and T155I (608830.0014). Patients typically presented with early disease that affected the function of both rods and cones and progressed to legal blindness in early adulthood.

Retinitis Pigmentosa 53

In a large 6-generation family segregating autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa mapping to chromosome 14q, Fingert et al. (2008) sequenced the candidate gene RDH12 and identified heterozygosity for a 1-bp deletion (608830.0015) in 19 affected individuals that was not found in unaffected family members or in 158 controls.

In a large, highly consanguineous pedigree segregating autosomal recessive early-onset retinitis pigmentosa, Benayoun et al. (2009) identified homozygosity for a missense mutation (A126V; 608830.0016) in 14 affected individuals from 8 sibships. The mutation was not found in 3 affected individuals from 2 additional sibships; in 2 of those patients, retinal pigmentation was milder and had an atypical appearance. Because haplotype analysis had excluded RDH12 as the gene underlying RP in these 2 sibships, Benayoun et al. (2009) concluded that the phenotype in these individuals was caused by mutation in another gene. A 45-year-old male family member who was heterozygous for A126V appeared to have a subclinical phenotype: although he did not describe significant subjective visual difficulties and denied nyctalopia or photosensitivity, his photopic ERG was at the lower limit of the normal range and his scotopic ERG was markedly reduced. Benayoun et al. (2009) noted that mild clinical phenotypes, including reduced ERG responses, had previously been reported in carriers of mutations in various RP genes.


Nomenclature

The form of LCA caused by mutation in the RDH12 gene, LCA13, was originally designated LCA3 because the RDH12 gene mapped within the region identified in a family with LCA3 reported by Stockton et al. (1998). It was later shown that the LCA3 form (604232) is not caused by mutation in the RDH12 gene and represents a separate LCA locus.


REFERENCES

  1. Benayoun, L., Spiegel, R., Auslender, N., Abbasi, A. H., Rizel, L., Hujeirat, Y., Salama, I., Garzozi, H. J., Allon-Shalev, S., Ben-Yosef, T. Genetic heterogeneity in two consanguineous families segregating early onset retinal degeneration: the pitfalls of homozygosity mapping. Am. J. Med. Genet. 149A: 650-656, 2009. [PubMed: 19140180, related citations] [Full Text]

  2. Fingert, J. H., Oh, K., Chung, M., Scheetz, T. E., Andorf, J. L., Johnson, R. M., Sheffield, V. C., Stone, E. M. Association of a novel mutation in the retinol dehydrogenase 12 (RDH12) gene with autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa. Arch. Ophthal. 126: 1301-1307, 2008. [PubMed: 18779497, related citations] [Full Text]

  3. Jacobson, S. G., Cideciyan, A. V., Aleman, T. S., Sumaroka, A., Schwartz, S. B., Windsor, E. A. M., Roman, A. J., Heon, E., Stone, E. M., Thompson, D. A. RDH12 and RPE65, visual cycle genes causing Leber congenital amaurosis, differ in disease expression. Invest. Ophthal. Vis. Sci. 48: 332-338, 2007. [PubMed: 17197551, related citations] [Full Text]

  4. Janecke, A. R., Thompson, D. A., Utermann, G., Becker, C., Hubner, C. A., Schmid, E., McHenry, C. L., Nair, A. R., Ruschendorf, F., Heckenlively, J., Wissinger, B., Nurnberg, P., Gal, A. Mutations in RDH12 encoding a photoreceptor cell retinol dehydrogenase cause childhood-onset severe retinal dystrophy. Nature Genet. 36: 850-854, 2004. Note: Erratum: Nature Genet. 36: 1024 only, 2004. [PubMed: 15258582, related citations] [Full Text]

  5. Perrault, I., Hanein, S., Gerber, S., Barbet, F., Ducroq, D., Dollfus, H., Hamel, C., Dufier, J.-L., Munnich, A., Kaplan, J., Rozet, J.-M. Retinal dehydrogenase 12 (RDH12) mutations in Leber congenital amaurosis. Am. J. Hum. Genet. 75: 639-646, 2004. [PubMed: 15322982, images, related citations] [Full Text]

  6. Stockton, D. W., Lewis, R. A., Abboud, E. B., Al-Rajhi, A., Jabak, M., Anderson, K. L., Lupski, J. R. A novel locus for Leber congenital amaurosis on chromosome 14q24. Hum. Genet. 103: 328-333, 1998. [PubMed: 9799089, related citations] [Full Text]

  7. Thompson, D. A., Janecke, A. R., Lange, J., Feathers, K. L., Hubner, C. A., McHenry, C. L., Stockton, D. W., Rammesmayer, G., Lupski, J. R., Antinolo, G., Ayuso, C., Baiget, M., and l1 others. Retinal degeneration associated with RDH12 mutations results from decreased 11-cis retinal synthesis due to disruption of the visual cycle. Hum. Molec. Genet. 14: 3865-3875, 2005. Note: Erratum: Hum. Molec. Genet. 15: 1559 only, 2006. [PubMed: 16269441, related citations] [Full Text]


Contributors:
Marla J. F. O'Neill - updated : 10/7/2010
Creation Date:
Carol A. Bocchini : 4/3/2009
carol : 12/08/2016
joanna : 12/10/2012
terry : 7/27/2012
terry : 10/14/2010
carol : 10/7/2010
carol : 4/7/2009
carol : 4/3/2009
carol : 4/3/2009

# 612712

LEBER CONGENITAL AMAUROSIS 13; LCA13


Other entities represented in this entry:

RETINITIS PIGMENTOSA 53, INCLUDED; RP53, INCLUDED

ORPHA: 65, 791;   DO: 0110330;  


Phenotype-Gene Relationships

Location Phenotype Phenotype
MIM number
Inheritance Phenotype
mapping key
Gene/Locus Gene/Locus
MIM number
14q24.1 Leber congenital amaurosis 13 612712 Autosomal dominant; Autosomal recessive 3 RDH12 608830

TEXT

A number sign (#) is used with this entry because Leber congenital amaurosis-13 (LCA13) is caused by homozygous or compound heterozygous mutation in the photoreceptor-specific retinal dehydrogenase gene RDH12 (608830) on chromosome 14q24.

Heterozygous or homozygous mutation in RDH12 has also been shown to cause a form of retinitis pigmentosa (RP53).

For a general phenotypic description and a discussion of genetic heterogeneity of Leber congenital amaurosis, see 204000; for retinitis pigmentosa, see 268000.


Clinical Features

Janecke et al. (2004) reported 3 consanguineous Austrian kindreds segregating Leber congenital amaurosis. Affected individuals in these families, as well as 2 Austrian individuals with sporadic LCA and 3 non-Austrian individuals with LCA, carried mutations in the RDH12 gene (see MOLECULAR GENETICS). All patients harboring RDH12 mutations had a severe yet progressive rod-cone dystrophy with severe macular atrophy but no or mild hyperopia. All individuals with RDH12-related LCA demonstrated onset of symptoms in early childhood (2-4 years) and progression to legal blindness in early adulthood (18-25 years). Both rods and cones were affected. Fundi showed pronounced attenuation of retinal arterioles and intraretinal bone spicule pigmentation. The electroretinogram was extinguished at the time of first investigation (as early as 5 and 6 years of age in 2 of the individuals).

In a study of 4 patients with LCA13, Jacobson et al. (2007) found that the retinal architecture was appreciably distorted, precluding identification of the normal laminae. Although some of the RDH12-mutant retinas were remarkably thick and others thin, all had the same dysplastic pattern detectable in the first decade of life. The authors noted that these findings contrast with those in RPE65 (180069)-mutant retinas in LCA2 (204100) in which the retinal structure is relatively preserved.

Retinitis Pigmentosa 53

Fingert et al. (2008) studied 35 members of a 6-generation family segregating autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa and identified 19 clinically affected individuals who had retinal findings typical of RP, including intraretinal bone spicule-like pigmentation and attenuation of retinal arterioles. The average age at diagnosis was 28.5 years (range, 12-43 years). Some family members maintained excellent central visual acuity and driving privileges into their eighth decade of life.

Benayoun et al. (2009) described a large, highly consanguineous pedigree segregating autosomal recessive early-onset retinitis pigmentosa, affecting 17 individuals from 10 sibships. The age at diagnosis ranged from 18 months to 35 years, but most were diagnosed within the first decade of life. Most patients reported poor night vision, reduced central vision, and peripheral field loss. Both scotopic and photopic ERGs were markedly reduced or completely extinct, but there was some degree of phenotypic variability. Funduscopic findings in most individuals included typical bone spicule-type pigment deposits, attenuation of the retinal arterioles, and pale appearance of the optic disc.


Mapping

Janecke et al. (2004) performed a whole-genome scan in 3 consanguineous Austrian families segregating LCA and identified a founder haplotype and a critical interval of 1.53 cM on chromosome 14q23.3-q24.1 that overlapped with the LCA3 locus (604232).

Retinitis Pigmentosa 53

In a large 6-generation family segregating autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa, Fingert et al. (2008) performed genomewide linkage analysis in 8 affected individuals and identified a 15.2-Mb region of chromosome 14q with a maximum nonparametric multipoint linkage score of 19.97. Genotyping all 19 affected individuals from the pedigree confirmed the linkage and yielded a maximum 2-point lod score of 6.81 (theta = 0.0) with marker D14S587. Analysis of recombination events narrowed the critical region to a 21.7-cM (18.6-Mb) interval between markers D14S1018 and D14S251 containing 173 genes.

In a large, highly consanguineous pedigree segregating autosomal recessive early-onset retinitis pigmentosa, Benayoun et al. (2009) performed haplotype analysis in 1 sibship using markers linked to all known autosomal recessive RP loci and genes and found linkage to chromosome 14q24.1 (haplotype 'A;' maximum 2-point lod score of 3.0 for marker D14S1069 at theta = 0.0). Haplotype A segregated with disease in 8 of 10 sibships, but 3 affected individuals in 2 sibships did not carry haplotype A.


Molecular Genetics

In all affected family members studied from 3 kindreds with LCA13, as well as in 2 Austrian individuals with sporadic LCA13, Janecke et al. (2004) identified homozygosity for a tyr226-to-cys mutation in the RDH12 gene (Y226C; 608830.0001). Janecke et al. (2004) identified additional mutations in RDH12 in 3 of 89 non-Austrian individuals with LCA13: 806delCCCTG (608830.0002) and gln189 to ter (Q189X: 608830.0003), each in homozygous state, and thr49 to met (T49M; 608830.0004) and arg62 to ter (R62X; 608830.0005) in compound heterozygosity.

Perrault et al. (2004) studied a series of 110 unrelated patients with LCA; in 4.1% of the patients, they identified mutations in the RDH12 gene (see 608830.0001-608830.0002, 608830.0006-608830.0013). All patients harboring RDH12 mutations had a severe yet progressive rod-cone dystrophy with severe macular atrophy but no or mild hyperopia; Perrault et al. (2004) noted that this phenotype may represent the upper extreme of the spectrum of retinitis pigmentosa (RP; see 268000).

In a cohort of 1,011 individuals diagnosed with autosomal recessive retinal dystrophy, Thompson et al. (2005) identified 20 different disease-associated RDH12 mutations in a total of 22 individuals. Haplotype analysis suggested a founder mutation for each of the 3 common mutations: 806_810delCCCTG (608830.0002), L99I (608830.0010), and T155I (608830.0014). Patients typically presented with early disease that affected the function of both rods and cones and progressed to legal blindness in early adulthood.

Retinitis Pigmentosa 53

In a large 6-generation family segregating autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa mapping to chromosome 14q, Fingert et al. (2008) sequenced the candidate gene RDH12 and identified heterozygosity for a 1-bp deletion (608830.0015) in 19 affected individuals that was not found in unaffected family members or in 158 controls.

In a large, highly consanguineous pedigree segregating autosomal recessive early-onset retinitis pigmentosa, Benayoun et al. (2009) identified homozygosity for a missense mutation (A126V; 608830.0016) in 14 affected individuals from 8 sibships. The mutation was not found in 3 affected individuals from 2 additional sibships; in 2 of those patients, retinal pigmentation was milder and had an atypical appearance. Because haplotype analysis had excluded RDH12 as the gene underlying RP in these 2 sibships, Benayoun et al. (2009) concluded that the phenotype in these individuals was caused by mutation in another gene. A 45-year-old male family member who was heterozygous for A126V appeared to have a subclinical phenotype: although he did not describe significant subjective visual difficulties and denied nyctalopia or photosensitivity, his photopic ERG was at the lower limit of the normal range and his scotopic ERG was markedly reduced. Benayoun et al. (2009) noted that mild clinical phenotypes, including reduced ERG responses, had previously been reported in carriers of mutations in various RP genes.


Nomenclature

The form of LCA caused by mutation in the RDH12 gene, LCA13, was originally designated LCA3 because the RDH12 gene mapped within the region identified in a family with LCA3 reported by Stockton et al. (1998). It was later shown that the LCA3 form (604232) is not caused by mutation in the RDH12 gene and represents a separate LCA locus.


REFERENCES

  1. Benayoun, L., Spiegel, R., Auslender, N., Abbasi, A. H., Rizel, L., Hujeirat, Y., Salama, I., Garzozi, H. J., Allon-Shalev, S., Ben-Yosef, T. Genetic heterogeneity in two consanguineous families segregating early onset retinal degeneration: the pitfalls of homozygosity mapping. Am. J. Med. Genet. 149A: 650-656, 2009. [PubMed: 19140180] [Full Text: https://doi.org/10.1002/ajmg.a.32634]

  2. Fingert, J. H., Oh, K., Chung, M., Scheetz, T. E., Andorf, J. L., Johnson, R. M., Sheffield, V. C., Stone, E. M. Association of a novel mutation in the retinol dehydrogenase 12 (RDH12) gene with autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa. Arch. Ophthal. 126: 1301-1307, 2008. [PubMed: 18779497] [Full Text: https://doi.org/10.1001/archopht.126.9.1301]

  3. Jacobson, S. G., Cideciyan, A. V., Aleman, T. S., Sumaroka, A., Schwartz, S. B., Windsor, E. A. M., Roman, A. J., Heon, E., Stone, E. M., Thompson, D. A. RDH12 and RPE65, visual cycle genes causing Leber congenital amaurosis, differ in disease expression. Invest. Ophthal. Vis. Sci. 48: 332-338, 2007. [PubMed: 17197551] [Full Text: https://doi.org/10.1167/iovs.06-0599]

  4. Janecke, A. R., Thompson, D. A., Utermann, G., Becker, C., Hubner, C. A., Schmid, E., McHenry, C. L., Nair, A. R., Ruschendorf, F., Heckenlively, J., Wissinger, B., Nurnberg, P., Gal, A. Mutations in RDH12 encoding a photoreceptor cell retinol dehydrogenase cause childhood-onset severe retinal dystrophy. Nature Genet. 36: 850-854, 2004. Note: Erratum: Nature Genet. 36: 1024 only, 2004. [PubMed: 15258582] [Full Text: https://doi.org/10.1038/ng1394]

  5. Perrault, I., Hanein, S., Gerber, S., Barbet, F., Ducroq, D., Dollfus, H., Hamel, C., Dufier, J.-L., Munnich, A., Kaplan, J., Rozet, J.-M. Retinal dehydrogenase 12 (RDH12) mutations in Leber congenital amaurosis. Am. J. Hum. Genet. 75: 639-646, 2004. [PubMed: 15322982] [Full Text: https://doi.org/10.1086/424889]

  6. Stockton, D. W., Lewis, R. A., Abboud, E. B., Al-Rajhi, A., Jabak, M., Anderson, K. L., Lupski, J. R. A novel locus for Leber congenital amaurosis on chromosome 14q24. Hum. Genet. 103: 328-333, 1998. [PubMed: 9799089] [Full Text: https://doi.org/10.1007/s004390050825]

  7. Thompson, D. A., Janecke, A. R., Lange, J., Feathers, K. L., Hubner, C. A., McHenry, C. L., Stockton, D. W., Rammesmayer, G., Lupski, J. R., Antinolo, G., Ayuso, C., Baiget, M., and l1 others. Retinal degeneration associated with RDH12 mutations results from decreased 11-cis retinal synthesis due to disruption of the visual cycle. Hum. Molec. Genet. 14: 3865-3875, 2005. Note: Erratum: Hum. Molec. Genet. 15: 1559 only, 2006. [PubMed: 16269441] [Full Text: https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddi411]


Contributors:
Marla J. F. O'Neill - updated : 10/7/2010

Creation Date:
Carol A. Bocchini : 4/3/2009

Edit History:
carol : 12/08/2016
joanna : 12/10/2012
terry : 7/27/2012
terry : 10/14/2010
carol : 10/7/2010
carol : 4/7/2009
carol : 4/3/2009
carol : 4/3/2009