Screening for Novel LOX and SOD1 Variants in Keratoconus Patients from Brazil

Autor: Diego Nery Benevides Gadelha, Alex Felipe Barbosa Feitosa, Rafaela Gomes da Silva, Luana Talita Antunes, Matheus Cavalcanti Muniz, Matheus Alencar de Oliveira, Dáfine de Oliveira Andrade, Nathalia Mayanna da Paz Silva, Sebastião Cronemberger, Bruno Luiz Fonseca Schamber-Reis
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2020
Předmět:
Zdroj: Journal of Ophthalmic & Vision Research, Vol 15, Pp 138-148 (2020)
Druh dokumentu: article
ISSN: 2008-322X
DOI: 10.18502/jovr.v15i2.6730
Popis: Purpose: To investigate the presence of the variants of lysyl oxygenase (LOX) and superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1) genes in Brazilian patients with advanced keratoconus. Methods: Donor genomic DNA extracted from blood samples was screened for 5'UTR, exonic LOX, and SOD1 variants in a subset of 26 patients presenting with advanced keratoconus (KISA > 1000% and I–S > 2.0) by Sanger sequencing. The impact of non-synonymous amino acid changes was evaluated by SIFT, PMUT, and PolyPhen algorithms. The Mutation Taster tool was used to evaluate the potential impact of formation of new donor and acceptor splice sites in the promoter region of affected volunteers carrying sequence variants. A 7-base SOD1 deletion (IVS2 + 50del7bp) previously associated with keratoconus was screened in 140 patients presenting classical keratoconus by gel fragment analysis, and positive samples were sequenced for confirmation. Results: We found an unreported missense variant in LOX exon 6 in one heterozygous patient, leading to substitution of proline with threonine at residue 392 (p. Thr392Pro) of LOX protein sequence. This mutation was predicted to be potentially damaging to LOX protein. Another LOX variant, Arg158Gln, was also detected in another patient but predicted to be non-pathogenic. Two additional new polymorphisms in LOX 5'UTR region (–116C > T and –58C > T) were found in two patients presenting with advanced keratoconus and were predicted to modulate or create donor/acceptor splice sites in LOX transcripts. Additionally, SOD1 deletion was detected in one patient presenting with severe keratoconus, not in control samples. Conclusion: We described three novel LOX polymorphisms identified for the first time in Brazilian patients with advanced keratoconus, as well as a previously described SOD1 deletion strongly associated with keratoconus. A possible role of these variants in modulating transcript levels in the cornea of affected individual requires further investigation.
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