4.5 Article

Molecular architecture and modifications of full-length myocilin

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL EYE RESEARCH
Volume 211, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.exer.2021.108729

Keywords

Myocilin; Glaucoma; Trabecular meshwork; Transmission electron microscopy; Extracellular matrix protein; Electron microscopy; N-linked glycosylation; Proteolysis; Eye; Protein misfolding; Oligomerization

Categories

Funding

  1. NIH [R01EY021205, R01EY021205-09S1, S10RR025679]

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Myocilin, a modular multidomain protein, is widely expressed in the human body but is best known for its presence in the trabecular meshwork extracellular matrix and its association with glaucoma. This study expressed and purified milligram-scale quantities of full-length myocilin, characterized its oligomerization and glycosylation states, and identified new misfolded states and layers of intrinsic heterogeneity, expanding our knowledge of myocilin structure and its biological function.
Myocilin, a modular multidomain protein, is expressed broadly in the human body but is best known for its presence in the trabecular meshwork extracellular matrix, and myocilin misfolding is associated with glaucoma. Despite progress in comprehending the structure and misfolding of the myocilin olfactomedin domain, the structure and function of full-length myocilin, and contextual changes in glaucoma, remain unknown. Here we expressed and purified milligram-scale quantities of full-length myocilin from suspension mammalian cell culture (Expi293F), enabling molecular characterization in detail not previously accessible. We systematically characterized disulfide-dependent and -independent oligomerization as well as confirmed glycosylation and susceptibility to proteolysis. We identified oligomeric states with glycosylation sites that are inaccessible to enzymatic removal. Low-resolution single particle 2D class averaging from conventional transmission electron microscopy imaging confirms an extended arrangement of tetramers, truncated products consistent with dimers, and a higher-ordered state consistent with octamer. Taken together, our study reveals new myocilin misfolded states and layers of intrinsic heterogeneity, expands our knowledge of olfactomedin-family proteins and lays the foundation for a better molecular understanding of myocilin structure and its still enigmatic biological function.

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