Gln48His is the prevalent myocilin mutation in primary open angle and primary congenital glaucoma phenotypes in India

Chakrabarti, Subhabrata ; Kaur, Kiranpreet ; Komatireddy, Sreelatha ; Acharya, Moulinath ; Devi, Koilkonda R. ; Mukhopadhyay, Arijit ; Mandal, Anil K. ; Hasnain, Seyed E. ; Chandrasekhar, Garudadri ; Thomas, Ravi ; Ray, Kunal (2005) Gln48His is the prevalent myocilin mutation in primary open angle and primary congenital glaucoma phenotypes in India Molecular Vision, 11 . pp. 111-113. ISSN 1090-0535

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Abstract

Purpose: Myocilin gene defects have been originally implicated in primary open angle glaucoma (POAG). Based on multiple reports for the occurrence of Gln48His mutation (c.144G>T; HGMD accession number CM023962) among Indian POAG patients, we wanted to estimate the prevalence of this mutation in primary open angle and primary congenital glaucoma (PCG) in India and assess its role in the causation of the disease. Methods: Two hundred cases each of POAG and PCG were screened for the Gln48His mutation by RFLP (AccI) analysis of the PCR amplicons followed by confirmation of the c.144G>T change by direct sequencing. Results: The Gln48His mutation was detected in 9 different glaucoma patients (four POAG and five PCG). While all four POAG cases were heterozygous, among PCG cases, four were heterozygous and one exhibited homozygous genotype for the mutation. One each of POAG and PCG patients was detected to be heterozygous for CYP1B1 mutation (c.1656C>T, Pro437Leu) and (c.1449G>A, Arg368His), respectively. None of the 300 ethnically matched normal controls contained either the MYOC or CYP1B1 mutation(s). Conclusions: The myocilin mutation, Gln48His, represents an allelic condition involving a spectrum of glaucoma phenotypes in Indian populations, and could be a potential risk factor towards disease predisposition among patients of Indian origin. The study also highlights the role of MYOC as a candidate in different glaucoma subtypes that needs to be investigated further.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Molecular Vision.
ID Code:15635
Deposited On:13 Nov 2010 12:48
Last Modified:17 May 2016 00:30

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