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PURPOSE OF REVIEW: To provide an overview of the genetics of the primary open-angle glaucomas with particular attention to congenital, infantile, and juvenile forms. RECENT FINDINGS: Mutations in CYP1B1, in addition to being the most common identifiable cause of autosomal recessive primary congenital/infantile glaucoma, can infrequently underlie juvenile and even primary adult-onset open-angle glaucoma, particularly in certain consanguineous populations. In 2009, patients diagnosed with congenital/infantile glaucoma were found to have recessive mutations in a second gene, LTBP2, with a phenotypic spectrum that includes primary megalocornea, spherophakia with ectopia lentis, and lens-related glaucoma. The most common identifiable cause of primary juvenile open-angle glaucoma across most populations remains heterozygous (autosomal dominant) MYOC mutation, underlying up to one-third of cases and possibly sometimes involved in earlier and later onset glaucomas Although primary adult-onset open-angle glaucoma usually does not follow simple Mendelian genetics and is etiologically complex, genome-wide association studies are uncovering genetic susceptibility factors. In some cases, primary adult-onset open-angle glaucoma can be caused by heterozygous mutation in MYOC, OPTN, or WDR36. In addition, in 2009, heterozygous NTF4 mutation was associated with the phenotype in a small percentage of patients from a German cohort. SUMMARY: Seemingly unaffected siblings of children with CYP1B1-related primary congenital/infantile glaucoma should undergo genetic testing because of variable expressivity for the phenotype; such testing should also be considered for other asymptomatic relatives, especially in consanguineous families. In western populations, dominant MYOC mutation remains a common cause of primary open-angle juvenile glaucoma and infrequently can be implicated in congenital/infantile or adult-onset forms; identified families should undergo genetic counseling. Primary adult-onset open-angle glaucoma rarely follows simple Mendelian genetics, but genomic studies in different populations are revealing potential genetic risk factors for the phenotype.
A.O. Khan. Division of Pediatric Ophthalmology, King Khaled Eye Specialist Hospital, PO Box 7191, Riyadh 11462, Saudi Arabia.
3.4.2 Gene studies (Part of: 3 Laboratory methods > 3.4 Molecular genetics)