Lehmann Ordan J, Tuft Stephen, Brice Glen, Smith Richard, Blixt Asa, Bell Rachel, Johansson Bengt, Jordan Tim, Hitchings Roger A, Khaw Peng T, John Simon W M, Carlsson Peter, Bhattacharya Shomi S
Department of Molecular Genetics, Institute of Ophthalmology, London, United Kingdom.
Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci. 2003 Jun;44(6):2627-33. doi: 10.1167/iovs.02-0609.
Mutations in murine and human versions of an ancestrally related gene usually result in similar phenotypes. However, interspecies differences exist, and in the case of two forkhead transcription factor genes (FOXC1 and FOXC2), these differences include corneal or anterior segment phenotypes, respectively. This study was undertaken to determine whether such discrepancies provide an opportunity for identifying novel human-murine ocular phenotypes.
Four pedigrees with early-onset glaucoma phenotypes secondary to segmental chromosomal duplications or deletions encompassing FOXC1 and 18 individuals from 9 FOXC2 mutation pedigrees underwent detailed ocular phenotyping. Subsequently, mice with mutations in Foxc1 or a related forkhead gene, Foxe3, were assessed for features of the human phenotypes.
A significant increase in central corneal thickness was present in affected individuals from the segmental duplication pedigrees compared with their unaffected relatives (mean increase 13%, maximum 35%, P < 0.05). Alterations in corneal thickness were present in mice heterozygous and homozygous for Foxe3 mutations but neither in Foxc1 heterozygotes nor the small human segmental deletion pedigree. Mutations in FOXC2 resulted in ocular anterior segment anomalies. These were more severe and prevalent with mutations involving the forkhead domain.
Normal corneal development is dependent on the precise dose and levels of activity of certain forkhead transcription factors. The altered corneal thickness attributable to increased forkhead gene dosage is particularly important, because it may affect the clinical management of certain glaucoma subtypes and lead to excessive treatment. The FOXC1 and Foxe3 data, taken together with the novel ocular phenotypes of FOXC2 mutations, highlight the remarkable cross-species conservation of function among forkhead genes.
在具有共同祖先的相关基因的小鼠和人类版本中,突变通常会导致相似的表型。然而,种间差异是存在的,就两个叉头转录因子基因(FOXC1和FOXC2)而言,这些差异分别包括角膜或眼前节表型。本研究旨在确定这些差异是否为识别新的人类 - 小鼠眼部表型提供机会。
对4个因包含FOXC1的节段性染色体重复或缺失而导致早发性青光眼表型的家系以及9个FOXC2突变家系中的18名个体进行了详细的眼部表型分析。随后,对Foxc1或相关叉头基因Foxe3发生突变的小鼠进行人类表型特征评估。
与未受影响的亲属相比,节段性重复家系中受影响个体的中央角膜厚度显著增加(平均增加13%,最大增加35%,P < 0.05)。Foxe3突变的杂合子和纯合子小鼠存在角膜厚度改变,但Foxc1杂合子和小型人类节段性缺失家系中均未出现。FOXC2突变导致眼前节异常。涉及叉头结构域的突变导致的异常更严重且更普遍。
正常的角膜发育依赖于某些叉头转录因子的精确剂量和活性水平。因叉头基因剂量增加导致的角膜厚度改变尤为重要,因为它可能影响某些青光眼亚型的临床管理并导致过度治疗。FOXC1和Foxe3的数据,连同FOXC2突变的新眼部表型,突出了叉头基因之间功能的显著跨物种保守性。