OPA1 (Kjer type) dominant optic atrophy: a novel mitochondrial disease.
Dominant optic atrophy (DOA) is the most common form of inherited optic neuropathy. Although heterogeneous, a major locus has been mapped to chromosome 3q28 and the responsible gene, OPA1, was recently identified. OPA1 is a mitochondrial dynamin-related GTPase implicated in the formation and maintenance of the mitochondrial network. To date, 62 mutations have been identified in a total of 201 DOA patients. Most of them (90%) are distributed from exons 8 to 28 with a majority in the GTPase domain (54%). None were found in the alternatively spliced exons 4, 4b, and 5b. Half of them are truncative mutations (50%) with a frequent recurrent allele, c.2708delTTAG. Most missense mutations (81%) cluster within the putative GTPase domain. Various pathogenic mechanisms may play a role in OPA1 DOA. Truncative mutations in the N-terminal region and perhaps missense mutations in the GTPase domain lead to a loss of function of the encoded protein and haplotype insufficiency. However, there is a cluster of truncation mutations in the in C-terminus, a putative dimerization domain, that could act through a dominant negative effect. The findings that OPA1-type DOA, as Leber optic neuropathy, is caused by the impairment of a mitochondrial protein address the question of the vulnerability of the retinal ganglion cell in response to mitochondrial defects.[1]References
- OPA1 (Kjer type) dominant optic atrophy: a novel mitochondrial disease. Delettre, C., Lenaers, G., Pelloquin, L., Belenguer, P., Hamel, C.P. Mol. Genet. Metab. (2002) [Pubmed]
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