Achromatopsia as a potential candidate for gene therapy.

  • Pang, J J
  • Alexander, J
  • Lei, B
  • Deng, W
  • Zhang, K
  • Li, Q
  • Chang, B
  • Hauswirth, W W
Publication date
January 2010
Publisher
The Mouseion at the JAXlibrary

Abstract

Achromatopsia is an autosomal recessive retinal disease involving loss of cone function that afflicts approximately 1 in 30,000 individuals. Patients with achromatopsia usually have visual acuities lower than 20/200 because of the central vision loss, photophobia, complete color blindness and reduced cone-mediated electroretinographic (ERG) amplitudes. Mutations in three genes have been found to be the primary causes of achromatopsia, including CNGB3 (beta subunit of the cone cyclic nucleotide-gated cation channel), CNGA3 (alpha subunit of the cone cyclic nucleotide-gated cation channel), and GNAT2 (cone specific alpha subunit of transducin). Naturally occurring mouse models with mutations in Cnga3 (cpfl5 mice) and Gnat2 (cpfl3 mic...

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