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PurposeChoroideremia results from the deficiency of Rab Escort Protein 1 (REP1), encoded by CHM, involved in the prenylation of Rab GTPases. Here, we investigate whether the transcription and expression of other genes involved in the prenylation of Rab proteins correlates with disease progression in a cohort of patients with choroideremia.MethodsRates of retinal pigment epithelial area loss in 41 patients with choroideremia were measured using fundus autofluorescence imaging for up to 4 years. From lysates of cultured skin fibroblasts donated by patients (n = 15) and controls (n = 14), CHM, CHML, RABGGTB and RAB27A mRNA expression, and REP1 and REP2 protein expression were compared.ResultsThe central autofluorescent island area loss in patients with choroideremia occurred with a mean half-life of 5.89 years (95% confidence interval [CI] = 5.09-6.70), with some patients demonstrating relatively fast or slow rates of progression (range = 3.3-14.1 years). Expression of CHM mRNA and REP1 protein were significantly decreased in all patients. No difference in expression of CHML, RABGGTB, RAB27A, or REP2 was seen between patients and controls. No correlation was seen between expression of the genes analyzed and rates of retinal degeneration. Non-sense induced transcriptional compensation of CHML, a CHM-like retrogene, was not observed in patients with CHM variants predicted to undergo non-sense mediated decay.ConclusionsPatients with choroideremia, who are deficient for REP1, show normal levels of expression of other genes involved in Rab prenylation, which do not appear to play any modifying role in the rate of disease progression.Translational relevanceThere remains little evidence for selection of patients for choroideremia gene therapy based on genotype.

More information Original publication

DOI

10.1167/tvst.10.8.12

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2021-07-01T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

10

Pages

12 - 12

Total pages

0

Addresses

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Keywords

Humans, Choroideremia, Retinal Degeneration, Disease Progression, Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing, Prenylation