Published in partnership with the

Logo

Club Jules Gonin

Blue cone monochromatism: clinical findings in patients with mutations in the red/green opsin gene cluster

Ulrich Kellner, Bernd Wissinger, Sabine Tippmann, Susanne Kohl, Hannelore Kraus and Michael H Foerster

View Related Documents

Abstract

Background  

X-linked blue cone monochromatism (BCM) has to be differentiated from x-linked cone dystrophy and autosomal recessive rod monochromatism.

Methods  

In nine male patients with congenital cone dysfunction (one family, six single cases; age range: 9–55 years), mutations in the red/green opsin gene cluster were confirmed. Clinical findings were analyzed retrospectively.

Results  

In one family and three single cases, a single red-green hybrid gene was found carrying a Cys203Arg mutation. Two patients had multiple opsin genes, a red/green hybrid gene and at least one green pigment gene, all carrying the Cys203Arg mutation. In one patient, a large deletion of the locus control region and parts of the red pigment gene were detected. Two patients (ages: 45 and 55 years) complained about progression. Two patients presented with nystagmus. Refractive errors (+8.0 and –11.0 D) and visual acuity were variable (0.05–0.3). Only four patients had a visual acuity ge0.1. In two patients, visual acuity could be improved using blue filter glasses. Four of five patients ge25 years had dystrophic alterations in the macula. Severe color vision defects and relative central scotoma were present in all patients. In the electroretinogram, residual cone responses were detected in 2/8 patients.

Conclusions  

Hybrid red/green opsin genes carrying the Cys203Arg mutation are a frequent cause of BCM in German patients. Molecular genetic evaluation is mandatory for adequate diagnosis of patients since from the clinical data only two patients were diagnosed as having BCM. In the other patients, either rod monochromatism or cone-rod dystrophy could not be excluded with certainty. The patients should be cautioned that macular dystrophy may develop in adults older than 30 years.
Ulrich Kellner and Bernd Wissinger contributed equally to this work and should be considered joint first authors. Parts of the results were presented at the meeting of the Deutsche Ophthalmologische Gesellschaft 2003.

Fulltext Preview

Image of the first page of the fulltext document