SOX2 anophthalmia syndrome: 12 new cases demonstrating broader phenotype and high frequency of large gene deletions

Preeti Bakrania(University of Oxford), David Robinson(Salisbury District Hospital), David J. Bunyan(Salisbury District Hospital), Alison Salt(University College London), Angela Martin(University of Oxford), John A. Crolla(Wessex Regional Genetics Laboratory), Alexander W. Wyatt(University of Oxford), Alistair R. Fielder(City, University of London), John Ainsworth(Birmingham Children's Hospital), Anthony T. Moore(Moorfields Eye Hospital), Steven P. Read(Salisbury District Hospital), Jimmy Uddin(University College London), D Laws(Singleton Hospital), Dora Pascuel-Salcedo(Hospital Universitario La Paz), Carmen Ayuso(Hospital Universitario Fundación Jiménez Díaz), Louise Allen(Addenbrooke's Hospital), J. R. O. Collin(University College London), Nicola Ragge
British Journal of Ophthalmology
May 23, 2007
Cited by 112Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Developmental eye anomalies, which include anophthalmia (absent eye) or microphthalmia (small eye) are an important cause of severe visual impairment in infants and young children. Heterozygous mutations in SOX2, a SOX1B-HMG box transcription factor, have been found in up to 10% of individuals with severe microphthalmia or anophthalmia and such mutations could also be associated with a range of non-ocular abnormalities. METHODS: We performed mutation analysis on a new cohort of 120 patients with congenital eye abnormalities, mainly anophthalmia, microphthalmia and coloboma. Multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA) and fluorescence in situ hybridisation (FISH) were used to detect whole gene deletion. RESULTS: We identified four novel intragenic SOX2 mutations (one single base deletion, one single base duplication and two point mutations generating premature translational termination codons) and two further cases with the previously reported c.70del20 mutation. Of 52 patients with severe microphthalmia or anophthalmia analysed by MLPA, 5 were found to be deleted for the whole SOX2 gene and 1 had a partial deletion. In two of these, FISH studies identified sub-microscopic deletions involving a minimum of 328 Kb and 550 Kb. The SOX2 phenotypes include a patient with anophthalmia, oesophageal abnormalities and horseshoe kidney, and a patient with a retinal dystrophy implicating SOX2 in retinal development. CONCLUSION: Our results provide further evidence that SOX2 haploinsufficiency is a common cause of severe developmental ocular malformations and that background genetic variation determines the varying phenotypes. Given the high incidence of whole gene deletion we recommend that all patients with severe microphthalmia or anophthalmia, including unilateral cases be screened by MLPA and FISH for SOX2 deletions.


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