IOVS Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology
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(Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science. 2003;44:1953-1961.)
© 2003 by The Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology, Inc.
DOI:  10.1167/iovs.02-0863

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Perfusion with the Olfactomedin Domain of Myocilin Does Not Affect Outflow Facility

Andreas Goldwich,1 C. Ross Ethier,2,3 Darren W.-H. Chan,2 and Ernst R. Tamm1

1From the Department of Anatomy, Molecular Anatomy, and Embryology, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, Erlangen, Germany; and the 2Departments of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering and 3Ophthalmology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

PURPOSE. Mutations in the MYOC gene coding for myocilin are associated with elevated intraocular pressure (IOP), and recombinant myocilin, produced in a prokaryotic expression system, has been reported to affect aqueous outflow facility. This study was conducted to test whether perfusion with a fragment of recombinant myocilin (containing the full-length olfactomedin domain), produced in a eukaryotic expression system, affects facility.

METHODS. 293 EBNA cells were transfected by a vector containing the BM40 signal peptide, a human cDNA coding for myocilin, and a polyhistidine tag (HisTag) sequence. Recombinant protein was isolated by Ni-chelate chromatography, and characterized, and perfused into cultured anterior segments of human and porcine eyes.

RESULTS. Recombinant myocilin was secreted as a ~55-kDa intact protein and two fragments arising from cleavage of the recombinant protein at amino acid 215. The C-terminal fragment, containing the entire olfactomedin domain, was successfully isolated. When perfused into human and porcine eyes, this C-terminal fragment did not appreciably affect outflow facility.

CONCLUSIONS. Although the olfactomedin domain appears to be important for the function of myocilin, perfusion with a recombinant myocilin fragment containing this domain does not change outflow facility. It is possible that both the olfactomedin and N-terminal domains (including the leucine zipper) must be present for myocilin to have full function. Alternatively, posttranslational modifications of myocilin may have a major impact on protein function.





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