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Myocilin and glaucoma: facts and ideas

Journal

PROGRESS IN RETINAL AND EYE RESEARCH
Volume 21, Issue 4, Pages 395-428

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/S1350-9462(02)00010-1

Keywords

myocilin; glaucoma; olfactomedin; trabecular meshkvork; retina; optic nerve; aqueous humor

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Mutations in the MYOC gone that encodes for myocilin are causative for some forms of juvenile and adult-onset primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG). Myocilin is a secreted 55-57kDa glycoprotein that forms dimers and multimers. Characteristic structural motifs include a myosin-like domain, a leucine zipper region and an olfactomedin domain. Most of the mutations that have been identified in patients with POAG are localized in the olfactomedin domain, which is highly conserved among species. In the eye, myocilin is expressed in high amounts in the trabecular meshwork (TM), sclera, ciliary body and iris, and at considerable lower amounts in retina and optic nerve head. Secreted myocilin is present in the aqueous humor. In the TM, myocilin is found within the cytoplasm of TM cells and in the juxtacanalicular region in association with fibrillar extracellular matrix components. Since patients with mutations in myocilin may have high intraocular pressures, the role of myocilin for aqueous humor outflow has been investigated and conflicting results have been obtained. Recombinant myocilin increases outflow resistance in perfused anterior segment organ cultures, while overexpression of myocilin after viral gene transfer appears to reduce outflow resistance. In TM cells, the expression of myocilin is induced upon treatment with dexamethasone at a time course similar to that observed in steroid-induced glaucoma. Other factors that induce myocilin expression are transforming growth factor-beta and mechanical stretch. Promoter elements that are important for the glucocorticoid induction have not been identified, but it has been shown that upstream stimulatory factor is critical for the basal promoter activity of MYOC. Mice with a targeted disruption of the myocilin gene do not express a phenotype, indicating that the glaucomatous phenotype in humans is not because of a loss-of-function effect. Experimental studies show that mutated myocilin is not secreted, but appears to accumulate in the cells. Such an accumulation might interfere with TM function and lead to impaired outflow resistance, but, so far, experimental evidence for such a scenario is lacking. In addition, the normal function(s) of myocilin is (are) still elusive. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.

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