Stargardt disease (STGD, also known as fundus flavimaculatus; FFM) is an autosomal recessive retinal disorder characterized by a juvenile-onset macular dystrophy, alterations of the peripheral retina, and subretinal deposition of lipofuscin-like material.
Three patients had a Gly1961Glu missense mutation, the most common variant in Stargardt disease (STGD), with 2 of these subjects having a macular dystrophy (MD) phenotype and a second ABCA4 variant previously associated with STGD.
To identify suspected RDS mutations in families in which different people have been identified with either generalised retinal dystrophy or macular dystrophy.
These results indicate that mutations in the rds gene can be expressed as a macular dystrophy, with evidence of primary cone dysfunction and preservation of peripheral rod function.
A deletion of Asn169 in the peripherin/RDS protein causes a peculiar form of autosomal dominant macular dystrophy in a large family from the Netherlands.
Mutations in peripherin 2 (PRPH2, also known as Rds), a tetraspanin protein found in photoreceptor outer segments (OSs), cause retinal degeneration ranging from rod-dominant retinitis pigmentosa (RP) to cone-dominant macular dystrophy (MD).
Recently, we identified a frameshift mutation in the CDH3 gene encoding P-cadherin as the proximal cause of hypotrichosis with juvenile macular dystrophy in four families.