Because of the corneal phenotypic similarity to aniridia-related keratopathy, it was hypothesized that the affected patients might have a dominantly inherited mutation of PAX6 on chromosome 11.
Population-based risk estimates of Wilms tumor in sporadic aniridia. A comprehensive mutation screening procedure of PAX6 identifies 80% of mutations in aniridia.
We screened the PAX6 gene by direct sequencing in three groups of patients: those affected by aniridia; those with diverse ocular manifestations; and those with Peters' anomaly.
Unlike the more common dominant and sporadic forms of aniridia, there has been no significant association with PAX6 mutations in individuals with GS and the mode of inheritance of the disease had long been regarded as uncertain.
A novel heterozygous PAX6 deletion c.1251_1353del103 (p.Pro418Serfs*87) affecting exon 14 and the 3'-untranslated-region (3'-UTR) was identified in the congenital aniridia family.
In the present study, an Italian casistic of aniridia patients has been investigated and a quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay to detect PAX6 gene deletions was set up.
A novel deletion in the PAX6 gene was identified in a Chinese family associated with aniridia, which expands the spectrum of the PAX6 mutation and its associated phenotype.
PAX6 haploinsufficiency ( +/-) can occur due to mutations involving only PAX6 in patients with isolated aniridia or as contiguous gene deletions in patients with Wilms tumor, aniridia, genitourinary anomalies, and range of developmental and intellectual disabilities syndrome.
We present the further characterisation of two aniridia pedigrees in which the disease segregates with chromosomal rearrangements which involve 11p13 but do not disrupt the PAX6 gene.
This study describes detailed clinical findings, including videonystagmography and fundus photography findings and emphasizes the importance of screening for the PAX6 gene in patients who present with CN in the absence of aniridia, as this will further elucidate the known phenotypes of PAX6-related diseases.
In mutations with partial loss of pax6 function eye development is initially relatively normal but froglets show an underdeveloped iris, similar to the classic phenotype (aniridia) seen in human patients with PAX6 mutations.
Here we describe a mutational analysis of 27 Danish patients using a dideoxy fingerprinting method, which identified PAX6 mutations in 18 individuals with aniridia.
WT1 haploinsufficiency is associated with a significant risk of Wilms tumor while PAX6 haploinsufficiency lead to aniridia, both genes located in the deleted region.
In conclusion, we identified a novel deletion mutation in the PAX6 gene resulting in an abnormal PAX6 COOH-terminal extension in the Chinese family with aniridia.