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Absence of myocilin and optineurin mutations in a large Philippine family with juvenile onset primary open angle glaucoma

Authors :
Dan Yi, Wang
Bao Jian, Fan
Oscar, Canlas
Pancy O S, Tam
Robert, Ritch
Dennis S C, Lam
Dorothy S P, Fan
Chi Pui, Pang
Source :
Molecular vision. 10
Publication Year :
2004

Abstract

To analyze the role of the two primary open angle glaucoma (POAG) genes, myocilin (MYOC) and optineurin (OPTN), in a large Philippine family segregating autosomal dominant juvenile onset open angle glaucoma (JOAG).The coding sequences of the MYOC and OPTN genes were screened in 27 family members by polymerase chain reaction and direct sequencing. The specific MYOC promoter polymorphism (MYOC.mtl) was identified by restriction endonuclease assay. All of the ABI MD-10 microsatellite markers on chromosomes 1, 2, 3, 7, 8, and 10, which harbor the six known POAG loci, were analyzed for linkage with POAG.No mutation was identified in this large kindred. Instead, three polymorphisms (-80G-A, -1000G-C, R76K) in MYOC and four polymorphisms (T34T, M98K, R545Q, IVS7+24G-A) in OPTN were found. All markers flanking the six known POAG loci gave LOD scores not more than 1.1. Non-parametric linkage analysis for all these markers resulted in p values more than 0.05.Both mutation testing and linkage analysis provide strong evidence against MYOC and OPTN being the causative gene in this large family. It indicates that unidentified genes will underlie the occurrence of glaucoma in this family.

Details

ISSN :
10900535
Volume :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular vision
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........3e64c56eb6b85223173dcdb69d30d22c