Congenital stationary night blindness in a patient with mild learning disability due to a compound heterozygous microdeletion of 15q13 and a missense mutation in < em > TRPM1 < /em >

Ophthalmic Genet. 2021 Mar 10:1-4. doi: 10.1080/13816810.2021.1897846. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTThe complete form of congenital stationary night blindness (cCSNB) represents a non-progressive retinal disorder characterized by night vision problems and often congenital nystagmus, reduced vision, high myopia, strabismus and normal fundus appearance. Clinically this form of CSNB can be diagnosed by full-field electroretinogram. The mode of inheritance can be X-linked and autosomal recessive with mutations in genes coding for proteins mainly present at the dendritic tips of ON-bipolar cells. Mutations in NYX, GRM6, GPR179, LRIT3 and TRPM1 lead to this condition. The latter gene defect represents the major form underlying cCSNBC. It codes for the melastatin-related transient receptor 1 expressed in the inner nuclear layer of the retina, with the protein localized in ON-bipolar cells. To date, various homozygous or compound heterozygous mutations in TRPM1 have been reported. Small chromosomal rearrangements are frequent cause of mental retardation. In rare cases deletions can overlap with a mutation on the remaining chromosome and lead to a recessive disorder. Here, we describe a patient with mild neurological deficiencies and cCSNB caused by a microdeletion on 15q32 overlapping with a TRPM1 variant.PMID:33691579 | DOI:10.1080/13816810.2021.1897846
Source: Ophthalmic Genetics - Category: Opthalmology Authors: Source Type: research