International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Feb 2020)

Clinical Course and Electron Microscopic Findings in Lymphocytes of Patients with <i>DRAM2</i>-Associated Retinopathy

  • Kazuki Kuniyoshi,
  • Takaaki Hayashi,
  • Shuhei Kameya,
  • Satoshi Katagiri,
  • Kei Mizobuchi,
  • Toshiaki Tachibana,
  • Daiki Kubota,
  • Hiroyuki Sakuramoto,
  • Kazushige Tsunoda,
  • Kaoru Fujinami,
  • Kazutoshi Yoshitake,
  • Takeshi Iwata,
  • Tadashi Nakano,
  • Shunji Kusaka

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms21041331
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 4
p. 1331

Abstract

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DRAM2-associated retinopathy is a rare inherited retinal dystrophy, and its outcome has not been determined. A single retinal involvement by a mutation of the DRAM2 gene is unexplained. We found three unrelated patients with a disease-causing DRAM2 variant in a biallelic state from 1555 Japanese individuals of 1314 families with inherited retinal dystrophy. We reviewed their medical records and examined their peripheral lymphocytes by transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Patient 1 was a 38-year-old woman who complained of night blindness and reduced vision. She developed macular degeneration at age 43 years. Patients 2 and 3 were a man and a woman both of whom noticed night blindness in their 30s. Both had a degeneration in the macula and midperiphery in their 40s, which progressed to a diffuse retinal degeneration in their 60s when their vision was reduced to hand motions. Three novel DRAM2 variants were identified. TEM of the lymphocytes of Patients 1 and 2 showed abnormal structures in 40.6% and 0.3% of the peripheral lymphocytes, respectively. We concluded that the DRAM2-associated retinopathy of our patients was a progressive rod-cone dystrophy, and the visual outcome was poor. The systemic effect of DRAM2 mutations may be compensable and have variations.

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