Structural basis for anomalous cellular trafficking behavior of glaucoma-associated A427T mutant myocilin

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Familial mutations in myocilin cause vision loss in glaucoma due to misfolding and a toxic gain of function in a senescent cell type in the anterior eye. Here we characterize the cellular behavior and structure of the myocilin (myocilin A427T ) mutant, of uncertain pathogenicity. Our characterization of A427T demonstrates that even mutations that minimally perturb myocilin structure and stability can present challenges for protein quality control clearance pathways. Namely, when expressed in an inducible immortalized trabecular meshwork cell line, inhibition of the proteasome reroutes wild-type myocilin, but not myocilin A427T , from endoplasmic reticulum associated degradation to lysosomal degradation. Yet, the crystal structure of the A427T myocilin olfactomedin domain shows modest perturbations largely confined to the mutation site. The previously unappreciated range of mutant myocilin behavior correlating with variable stability and structure provides a rationale for why it is challenging to predict causal pathogenicity of a given myocilin mutation, even in the presence of clinical data for members of an affected family. Comprehending the continuum of mutant myocilin behavior in the laboratory supports emerging efforts to use genetics to assess glaucoma risk in the clinic. In addition, the study supports a therapeutic strategy aimed at enhancing autophagic clearance of mutant myocilin.

Significance statement

  • Rare familial mutations cause early onset glaucoma

  • A427T is a case of uncertain pathogenicity

  • A427T is structurally similar to wild-type but is not efficiently degraded

Article activity feed