X染色体连锁遗传性视网膜疾病的女性携带者——遗传学、诊断和潜在疗法。

IF 18.6 1区 医学 Q1 OPHTHALMOLOGY
Sena A. Gocuk , Jasleen K. Jolly , Thomas L. Edwards , Lauren N. Ayton
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引用次数: 3

摘要

遗传性视网膜疾病(IRD)是一组导致进行性视力丧失的异质性疾病,通常是由单基因突变引起的。X连锁IRD的女性携带者只有一个致病基因拷贝,因此可能表现出从接近正常视网膜到严重疾病和视力丧失的各种临床症状。X连锁携带者个体基因突变与疾病严重程度之间的关系需要进一步研究。这篇综述总结了目前关于脉络膜炎和X连锁视网膜色素变性女性携带者疾病谱的文献。对各种分类系统进行对比,以准确地对视网膜疾病进行分级。此外,还探索了胚胎早期的遗传机制,以潜在地解释女性携带者疾病的变异性。未来这一领域的研究将深入了解女性携带者的基因型和视网膜表型之间的关系,这将指导这些患者的管理。这篇综述承认了识别哪些患者可能有出现严重症状的高风险的重要性,因此应考虑用于新兴的治疗方法,如视网膜基因治疗。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Female carriers of X-linked inherited retinal diseases – Genetics, diagnosis, and potential therapies

Inherited retinal diseases (IRDs) are a group of heterogeneous conditions that cause progressive vision loss, typically due to monogenic mutations. Female carriers of X-linked IRDs have a single copy of the disease-causing gene, and therefore, may exhibit variable clinical signs that vary from near normal retina to severe disease and vision loss. The relationships between individual genetic mutations and disease severity in X-linked carriers requires further study.

This review summarises the current literature surrounding the spectrum of disease seen in female carriers of choroideremia and X-linked retinitis pigmentosa. Various classification systems are contrasted to accurately grade retinal disease. Furthermore, genetic mechanisms at the early embryonic stage are explored to potentially explain the variability of disease seen in female carriers.

Future research in this area will provide insight into the association between genotype and retinal phenotypes of female carriers, which will guide in the management of these patients. This review acknowledges the importance of identifying which patients may be at high risk of developing severe symptoms, and therefore should be considered for emerging treatments, such as retinal gene therapy.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
34.10
自引率
5.10%
发文量
78
期刊介绍: Progress in Retinal and Eye Research is a Reviews-only journal. By invitation, leading experts write on basic and clinical aspects of the eye in a style appealing to molecular biologists, neuroscientists and physiologists, as well as to vision researchers and ophthalmologists. The journal covers all aspects of eye research, including topics pertaining to the retina and pigment epithelial layer, cornea, tears, lacrimal glands, aqueous humour, iris, ciliary body, trabeculum, lens, vitreous humour and diseases such as dry-eye, inflammation, keratoconus, corneal dystrophy, glaucoma and cataract.
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