PAX6 mutations reviewed

J Prosser, V van Heyningen - Human mutation, 1998 - Wiley Online Library
J Prosser, V van Heyningen
Human mutation, 1998Wiley Online Library
Mutations inPAX6 are responsible for human aniridia and have also been found in patients
with Peter's anomaly, with congenital cataracts, with autosomal dominant keratitis, and with
isolated foveal hypoplasia. No locus other than chromosome 11p13 has been implicated in
aniridia, and PAX6 is clearly the major, if not only, gene responsible. Twenty‐eight percent
of identified PAX6 mutations are C–T changes at CpG dinucleotides, 20% are splicing
errors, and more than 30% are deletion or insertion events. There is a noticeably elevated …
Abstract
Mutations inPAX6 are responsible for human aniridia and have also been found in patients with Peter's anomaly, with congenital cataracts, with autosomal dominant keratitis, and with isolated foveal hypoplasia. No locus other than chromosome 11p13 has been implicated in aniridia, and PAX6 is clearly the major, if not only, gene responsible. Twenty‐eight percent of identified PAX6 mutations are C–T changes at CpG dinucleotides, 20% are splicing errors, and more than 30% are deletion or insertion events. There is a noticeably elevated level of mutation in the paired domain compared with the rest of the gene. Increased mutation in the homeodomain is accounted for by the hypermutable CpG dinucleotide in codon 240. Very nearly all mutations appear to cause loss of function of the mutant allele, and more than 80% of exonic substitutions result in nonsense codons. In a gene with such extraordinarily high sequence conservation throughout evolution, there are presumed undiscovered missense mutations, these are hypothesized to exist in as‐yet unidentified phenotypes. Hum Mutat 11:93–108, 1998. © 1998 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
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