Clinical characterisation of the CABP4-related retinal phenotype.
FS, Khan AO, Alrashed M, Alkuraya . 2013
Background: Calcium binding protein 4 (CABP4),specically located in photoreceptor synaptic terminals, has been associated with congenital stationary night blindness based on this clinical diagnosis being made for three individuals from two Swiss families with CABP4 mutations; however, the few reported cases limit phenotype–genotype correlation. We expand the number
of reported patients with CABP4 mutations and clinically characterise the CABP4-related phenotype.
Methods: A retrospective case series of 11 individuals (age 2–26 years; four consanguineous families) with early-onset retinal dysfunction found to harbour CABP4 mutations after a strategy of homozygosity analysis and/or candidate gene testing.
Results: The 11 patients from four families harboured the same homozygous CABP4 mutation (c.81_82insA; p.Pro28Thrfs*4) and shared a common haplotype. All patients had congenital nystagmus, stable low vision, photophobia and a normal or near-normal fundus
appearance. None complained of night blindness when specically questioned. Eight had hyperopic cycloplegic refractions (+1.00 dioptre). Electroretinography showed an electronegative waveform response to scotopic bright ash, near-normal to subnormal rod function, and delayed and/or decreased cone responses or was non-recordable. Although these and previously reported families with homozygous mutations were labelled with different clinical diagnoses, all had similar
clinical features.
Conclusion: These typical clinical features, which do not include a symptom of night blindness, suggest CABP4 mutations. The phenotype is best uniformly termed congenital cone-rod synaptic disorder. In Saudi Arabia a founder homozygous c.81_82insA CABP4 mutation is a recurrent cause.
Background/aim: Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) is the commonest form of retinal dystrophy and is usually inherited as a monogenic trait but with remarkable genetic heterogeneity.
Background: Calcium binding protein 4 (CABP4),specically located in photoreceptor synaptic terminals, has been associated with congenital stationary night blindness based on this clinical…
Retinal dystrophy (RD) is a heterogeneous group of hereditary diseases caused by loss of photoreceptor function and contributes significantly to the etiology of blindness globally but especially…