Coats' disease of the retina (unilateral retinal telangiectasis) caused by somatic mutation in the NDP gene: A role for norrin in retinal angiogenesis

Graeme C M Black, Rahat Perveen, Richard Bonshek, Mark Cahill, Jill Clayton-Smith, I. Christopher Lloyd, David McLeod

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Coats' disease is characterized by abnormal retinal vascular development (so-called 'retinal telangiectasis') which results in massive intraretinal and subretinal lipid accumulation (exudative retinal detachment). The classical form of Coats' disease is almost invariably isolated, unilateral and seen in males. A female with a unilateral variant of Coats' disease gave birth to a son affected by Norrie disease. Both carried a missense mutation within the NDP gene on chromosome Xp11.2. Subsequently analysis of the retinas of nine enucleated eyes from males with Coats' disease demonstrated in one a somatic mutation in the NDP gene which was not present within non-retinal tissue. We suggest that Coats' telangiectasis is secondary to somatic mutation in the NDP gene which results in a deficiency of norrin (the protein product of the NDP gene) within the developing retina. This supports recent observations that the protein is critical for normal retinal vasculogenesis.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)2031-2035
    Number of pages4
    JournalHuman Molecular Genetics
    Volume8
    Issue number11
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1999

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