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Query: UMLS:C0033377 (
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The extraocular fibrosis syndromes are congenital ocular-motility disorders that arise from dysfunction of the oculomotor, trochlear, and abducens nerves and/or the muscles that they innervate. Each is marked by a specific form of restrictive paralytic ophthalmoplegia with or without
ptosis
. Individuals with the classic form of congenital fibrosis of the extraocular muscles (CFEOM1) are born with bilateral
ptosis
and a restrictive infraductive external ophthalmoplegia. We previously demonstrated that CFEOM1 is caused by an autosomal dominant locus on chromosome 12 and results from a developmental absence of the superior division of the oculomotor nerve. We now have mapped a variant of CFEOM, exotropic strabismus fixus ("CFEOM2"). Affected individuals are born with bilateral
ptosis
and restrictive ophthalmoplegia with the globes "frozen" in extreme abduction. This autosomal recessive disorder is present in members of three consanguineous Saudi Arabian families. Genetic analysis of 70 individuals (20 affected individuals) reveals linkage to markers on chromosome 11q13, with a combined LOD score of 12.3 at the single nonrecombinant marker, D11S1314. The 2.5-cM
CFEOM2
critical region is flanked by D11S4196/D11S4162 and D11S4184/1369. Two of the three families share a common disease-associated haplotype, suggesting a founder effect for
CFEOM2
. We hypothesize that
CFEOM2
results from an analogous developmental defect to CFEOM1, one that affects both the superior and inferior divisions of the oculomotor nerve and their corresponding alpha motoneurons and extraocular muscles.
...
PMID:Congenital fibrosis of the extraocular muscles type 2, an inherited exotropic strabismus fixus, maps to distal 11q13. 968 11
The congenital fibrosis syndromes (CFS), including congenital fibrosis of the extraocular muscles (CFEOM) and Duane syndrome (DS), are rare congenital strabismus syndromes that present with nonprogressive restrictive ophthalmoplegia with or without
ptosis
. Although historically believed to result from primary extraocular muscle (EOM) fibrosis, our laboratory's work is based on the hypothesis that these disorders result from distinct, but analogous, developmental defects of the oculomotor (nIII), trochlear (nIV), and abducens (nVI) nuclei. We have defined three inherited CFEOM phenotypes (CFEOM1-3) and have mapped each phenotype to a distinct genetic locus (FEOM1-3). Individuals with CFEOM1 are born with bilateral
ptosis
and both eyes fixed in a downward position with absent upgaze and aberrant horizontal gaze. This disorder maps to the FEOM1 locus on chromosome 12cen.(1,2) Neuropathology studies of CFEOM1 reveal the absence of the superior division of oculomotor nerve and its corresponding alpha motor neurons in the midbrain, with abnormalities of target EOMs.(3) These neuropathology findings parallel those previously identified in Duane syndrome, in which there is an absence of nVI and the abducens nerve.(4,5) Individuals with
CFEOM2
are born with bilateral
ptosis
and exotropia. This atypical form of CFEOM maps to the
FEOM2
locus on chromosome 11q13 and results from mutations in ARIX (PHOX2A).(6,7) ARIX encodes a homeodomain transcription factor protein previously shown to be required for nIII/nIV development in mouse and zebrafish.(8,9) Together, these findings support the hypothesis that the congenital fibrosis syndromes result from parallel defects in nIII, nIV, and nVI nuclear development. Functional studies of the CFEOM genes should provide additional insight into the unique features of the extraocular lower motor neuron axis in health and disease. (For full (refs. 1-9), see reference list of the main paper.)
...
PMID:Applications of molecular genetics to the understanding of congenital ocular motility disorders. 1196 Jul 93