1. Academic Validation
  2. Mutations in KERA, encoding keratocan, cause cornea plana

Mutations in KERA, encoding keratocan, cause cornea plana

  • Nat Genet. 2000 May;25(1):91-5. doi: 10.1038/75664.
N S Pellegata 1 J L Dieguez-Lucena T Joensuu S Lau K T Montgomery R Krahe T Kivelä R Kucherlapati H Forsius A de la Chapelle
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Division of Human Cancer Genetics, Comprehensive Cancer Center, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, USA.
PMID: 10802664 DOI: 10.1038/75664
Abstract

Specialized collagens and small leucine-rich proteoglycans (SLRPs) interact to produce the transparent corneal structure. In cornea plana, the forward convex curvature is flattened, leading to a decrease in refraction. A more severe, recessively inherited form (CNA2; MIM 217300) and a milder, dominantly inherited form (CNA1; MIM 121400) exist. CNA2 is a rare disorder with a worldwide distribution, but a high prevalence in the Finnish population. The gene mutated in CNA2 was assigned by linkage analysis to 12q (refs 4, 5), where there is a cluster of several SLRP genes. We cloned two additional SLRP genes highly expressed in cornea: KERA (encoding keratocan) in 12q and OGN (encoding osteoglycin) in 9q. Here we report mutations in KERA in 47 CNA2 patients: 46 Finnish patients are homozygous for a founder missense mutation, leading to the substitution of a highly conserved amino acid; and one American patient is homozygous for a mutation leading to a premature stop codon that truncates the KERA protein. Our data establish that mutations in KERA cause CNA2. CNA1 patients had no mutations in these proteoglycan genes.

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