Reis Linda M, Tyler Rebecca C, Schneider Adele, Bardakjian Tanya, Semina Elena V
Department of Pediatrics and Children's Research Institute at the Medical College of Wisconsin and Children's Hospital of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI 53226-0509, USA.
Mol Vis. 2010 Apr 28;16:768-73.
The role of SRY-Box 2 (SOX2) in anophthalmia/microphthalmia (A/M) is well known, with 10%-20% of A/M explained by mutations in SOX2. SOX2 plays roles in the development of both the posterior and anterior segment structures of the eye and relies on interactions with tissue-specific partner proteins to execute its function, raising the possibility that SOX2 mutations may result in varying ocular phenotypes. Recent data has identified a missense mutation in SOX2 in an extended pedigree with phenotypes as varied as A/M, isolated iris hypoplasia, iris and chorioretinal coloboma, pupil defects, and hypermetropia, suggesting a broader phenotypic spectrum associated with SOX2 mutations.
Screening of SOX2 was completed in 89 patients with a variety of ocular anomalies, including 28 with A/M and 61 with normal eye size and anterior segment dysgenesis (28), cataract (14), isolated coloboma (5), or other eye disorders (14).
The recurrent de novo frameshift mutation c.70del20 was identified in one patient with microphthalmia and syndromic anomalies consistent with SOX2 anophthalmia syndrome; the mutation frequency in our A/M population (4%) was lower than previously reported; it is likely that extensive utilization of clinical SOX2 testing has led to a bias toward SOX2-negative A/M cases in our research cohort. No disease-causing mutations were identified in patients with non-microphthalmia phenotypes.
The recurrent c.70del20 mutation accounts for 21% of all independent SOX2 mutations reported to date. Due to the increased use of clinical SOX2 testing, the frequency of SOX2 mutations identified in research A/M populations will likely continue to decrease. Mutations in SOX2 do not appear to be a common cause of ocular defects other than anophthalmia/microphthalmia.
性别决定区Y框蛋白2(SOX2)在无眼/小眼畸形(A/M)中的作用已广为人知,10%-20%的A/M病例可由SOX2突变解释。SOX2在眼睛后段和前段结构的发育中均发挥作用,且依赖于与组织特异性伴侣蛋白的相互作用来执行其功能,这增加了SOX2突变可能导致不同眼部表型的可能性。最近的数据在一个扩展家系中鉴定出SOX2的一个错义突变,该家系具有多种不同的表型,如A/M、孤立性虹膜发育不全、虹膜和脉络膜视网膜缺损、瞳孔缺陷以及远视,提示与SOX2突变相关的表型谱更广泛。
对89例患有各种眼部异常的患者进行了SOX2筛查,其中包括28例A/M患者以及61例眼球大小正常但存在前段发育异常(28例)、白内障(14例)、孤立性缺损(5例)或其他眼部疾病(14例)的患者。
在1例患有小眼畸形且伴有与SOX2无眼综合征一致的综合征性异常的患者中鉴定出复发性新生移码突变c.70del20;我们A/M人群中的突变频率(4%)低于先前报道;很可能临床SOX2检测的广泛应用导致我们的研究队列中偏向于SOX2阴性的A/M病例。在非小眼畸形表型的患者中未鉴定出致病突变。
复发性c.70del20突变占迄今为止报道的所有独立SOX2突变的21%。由于临床SOX2检测的使用增加,在研究的A/M人群中鉴定出的SOX2突变频率可能会继续下降。除无眼/小眼畸形外,SOX2突变似乎并非眼部缺陷的常见原因。