Visual pigment gene structure and expression in human retinae

T Yamaguchi, AG Motulsky… - Human Molecular …, 1997 - academic.oup.com
T Yamaguchi, AG Motulsky, SS Deeb
Human Molecular Genetics, 1997academic.oup.com
We determined the genotypes of the X-chromosome-linked red/green color vision genes by
a novel PCR/SSCP-based method and assessed expression by mRNA analysis in retinae of
51 unselected post mortem eye specimens from Caucasian males of unknown color vision
status. All individuals had a single red (long-wave) pigment gene and one or more (an
average of two) green (middle-wave) pigment genes. Four males had 5′ green-red3′
hybrid genes in addition to normal red and green pigment genes. These findings are …
Abstract
We determined the genotypes of the X-chromosome-linked red/green color vision genes by a novel PCR/SSCP-based method and assessed expression by mRNA analysis in retinae of 51 unselected post mortem eye specimens from Caucasian males of unknown color vision status. All individuals had a single red (long-wave) pigment gene and one or more (an average of two) green (middle-wave) pigment genes. Four males had 5′green-red3′ hybrid genes in addition to normal red and green pigment genes. These findings are consistent with earlier studies on human visual pigment gene structure using Southern blotting and with a recent study using pulsed-field electrophoresis. We interpret claims of much larger numbers of red, green and green-red hybrid genes to be technical artifacts. The ratio of expressed red to green pigment retinal mRNA varied widely (1–10 with a mode of 4) and was not correlated with that of red to green pigment genes. In one individual with a green-red hybrid gene in addition to normal red and green pigment genes, the normal red pigment gene and the hybrid gene were both expressed, but the normal green gene was not. This person presumably had deuteranomalous color vision. Two with green-red hybrid genes expressed the normal red and green pigment genes, but not the hybrid genes. These two individuals presumably had normal color vision. We interpret the failure to express their green-red hybrid genes to be caused by their location at a more distal position in the visual pigment gene array.
Oxford University Press