菅野 仁
   Department   School of Medicine(Tokyo Women's Medical University Hospital), School of Medicine
   Position   Professor (Fixed Term)
Article types Original article
Language English
Peer review Peer reviewed
Title Molecular cloning and expression profile of rat myocilin.
Journal Formal name:Molecular genetics and metabolism
Abbreviation:Mol Genet Metab
ISSN code:1096-7192(Print)1096-7192(Linking)
Volume, Issue, Page 70(1),pp.75-80
Author and coauthor Taguchi M, Kanno H, Kubota R, Miwa S, Shishiba Y, Ozawa Y
Authorship 2nd author
Publication date 2000/05
Summary Myocilin is known to be associated with the pathogenesis of juvenile-onset primary open angle glaucoma. The tissue distribution of myocilin transcripts has been analyzed in both humans and mice, and a high level of expression in the retina and skeletal muscle has been reported. The functions of myocilin in these tissues are unknown. We isolated rat myocilin cDNA and examined the expression pattern of myocilin, including its expression in endocrine organs, using Northern blot analysis. The rat myocilin cDNA sequence has two in-frame initiation codons, the upstream and downstream ATGs corresponding to the initiation codon of human and murine myocilin, respectively. It is most likely that the first ATG is a translational initiation codon, since 8 of 13 amino acid residues deduced from the rat cDNA sequence between the first and the second ATGs are the same as those in human myocilin. The open reading frame encodes 502 amino acids. Rat myocilin also has both a myosin-like domain and an olfactmedin-like domain, which have been identified in human and murine myocilin. Northern analysis of rat myocilin mRNA revealed substantial expression in the thyroid gland, as well as in the retina and muscle. No transcripts were detected in other endocrine glands, including the adrenal gland, pituitary, and testis. Myocilin may play an important role in thyroid function. Further study of the expression and role of myocilin in the thyroid is required.
DOI 10.1006/mgme.2000.2986
Document No. 10833334