학술논문

Vision loss in juvenile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (CLN3 disease).
Document Type
Article
Source
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. May2016, Vol. 1371 Issue 1, p55-67. 13p.
Subject
*NEURONAL ceroid-lipofuscinosis
*NEURODEGENERATION
*LYSOSOMAL storage diseases
*DISEASE progression
*PHENOTYPES
Language
ISSN
0077-8923
Abstract
Juvenile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (JNCL; also known as CLN3 disease) is a devastating neurodegenerative lysosomal storage disorder and the most common form of Batten disease. Progressive visual and neurological symptoms lead to mortality in patients by the third decade. Although ceroid-lipofuscinosis, neuronal 3 ( CLN3) has been identified as the sole disease gene, the biochemical and cellular bases of JNCL and the functions of CLN3 are yet to be fully understood. As severe ocular pathologies manifest early in disease progression, the retina is an ideal tissue to study in the efforts to unravel disease etiology and design therapeutics. There are significant discrepancies in the ocular phenotypes between human JNCL and existing murine models, impeding investigations on the sequence of events occurring during the progression of vision impairment. This review focuses on current understanding of vision loss in JNCL and discusses future research directions toward molecular dissection of the pathogenesis of the disease and associated vision problems in order to ultimately improve the quality of patient life and cure the disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]