Mutations in SCO2 Are Associated with Autosomal-Dominant High-Grade Myopia

2013
Myopia, or near-sightedness, is an ocular refractive errorof unfocused image quality in front of the retinal plane. Individuals with high-grade myopia ( dioptricpower greater than −6.00) are predisposed to ocular morbidities such as glaucoma, retinal detachment, and myopic maculopathy. Nonsyndromic, high-grade myopia is highly heritable, and to date multiple gene loci have been reported. We performed exome sequencingin 4 individuals from an 11-member family of European descent from the United States. Affected individuals had a mean dioptricspherical equivalent of −22.00 sphere. A premature stop codonmutation c.157C>T (p.Gln53*) cosegregatingwith disease was discovered within SCO2 that maps to chromosome 22q13.33. Subsequent analyses identified three additional mutations in three highly myopic unrelated individuals (c.341G>A, c.418G>A, and c.776C>T). To determine differential gene expression in a developmental mouse model, we induced myopia by applying a −15.00D lens over one eye. Messenger RNA levels of SCO2 were significantly downregulated in myopic mouse retinae. Immunohistochemistry in mouse eyes confirmed SCO2 protein localization in retina, retinal pigment epithelium, and sclera. SCO2 encodes for a copper homeostasis protein influential in mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase activity. Copper deficiencieshave been linked with photoreceptor loss and myopia with increased scleral wall elasticity. Retinal thinning has been reported with an SC02 variant. Human mutation identification with support from an induced myopic animal provides biological insights of myopic development.
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