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PURPOSE: To identify germline variants in myocilin (MYOC) and other known monogenic glaucoma genes in Finnish patients with juvenile open-angle glaucoma (JOAG). METHODS: Finnish patients with JOAG treated between 2010 and 2018 at the Department of Ophthalmology, Helsinki University Hospital, Finland, were enrolled. We sequenced all exonic regions and flanking splice sites of MYOC for five patients and one healthy relative using Sanger sequencing. In 48 patients, we performed exome sequencing to identify variants also in 28 other glaucoma-related genes. RESULTS: Fifty-three individuals with JOAG from 50 pedigrees, and one healthy relative, participated. The mean age at diagnosis was 30.8 years [SD 7.6; range 11 to 39]. Five probands had probably pathogenic variants in MYOC: c.1102C>T p.(Gln368Ter), c.1109C>T p.(Pro370Leu), c.1130C>T p.(Thr377Met), c.1132G>A p.(Asp378Asn) and c.1456C>T p.(Leu486Phe). Four of these patients had a family history of dominantly inherited JOAG. The frequency of MYOC variants was 10% (5 of 50 families). One patient and his mother with JOAG had a novel loss-of-function variant in the FOXC1 gene, c.366G>A p.(Trp122Ter). A patient with sporadic JOAG had a homozygous likely pathogenic variant in the LTBP2 gene, c.3938G>A p.(Cys1313Tyr). The genetic variants explained 14% (7 out of 50 families; 95% CI, 6%-23%) of JOAG in our cohort. CONCLUSIONS: The frequency of pathogenic variants in previously known glaucoma-associated genes is low in Finnish patients with JOAG. Because of the distinct genetic background of Finns, it might be possible to identify novel glaucoma genes through our JOAG series in the future.
Eye Genetics Group, Folkhälsan Research Center, Biomedicum Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.
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