TY - JOUR
T1 - Morphometric analysis of the lens in human aniridia and mouse Small eye
AU - Voskresenskaya, Anna
AU - Pozdeyeva, Nadezhda
AU - Batkov, Yevgeniy
AU - Vasilyeva, Tatyana
AU - Marakhonov, Andrey
AU - West, Richard A.
AU - Caplan, Jeffrey L.
AU - Cvekl, Ales
AU - Wang, Yan
AU - Duncan, Melinda K.
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by R01 EY012200 (AC) and EY028597 (MKD) grants from the National Eye Institute , and a grant from The Aniridia Foundation International (MKD). The University of Delaware Bioimaging and Multimodal imaging centers are supported by the National Institute of General Medical Sciences and the State of Delaware under INBRE program grant P20 GM103446 . The study was partly supported by RFBR grant 19-015-00122 .
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2021/2
Y1 - 2021/2
N2 - Congenital aniridia is caused by heterozygous mutations in the PAX6 gene. In this disease, congenital iris and foveal hypoplasia is associated with juvenile onset cataract, glaucoma, and corneal keratopathy. In rodents, Pax6 mutations result in a congenital reduction in ocular size that is not typically described in human aniridia. Here, the ocular morphometry of aniridia patients is compared with the lens phenotype of Pax6+/tm1/Pgr mice to reveal whether there are species differences in Pax6 regulation of lens development and homeostasis. Ultrasound biometry (UBM) revealed that eleven percent of aniridia patients exhibited mild microphthalmia while the anterior chamber depth of aniridic eyes was significantly reduced from 6 months of age onward. Although aniridic lens thickness was normal from birth, it was significantly decreased in aniridic lenses older than 30. Notably, 86% of aniridic lenses exhibited cataractous changes in this cohort. In addition, a significant proportion of aniridia patients develop lens subluxation as they age associated with reduced lens diameter as measured by anterior segment optical coherence tomography (AS-OCT). Analysis of young adult Pax6+/tm1/Pgr mouse lenses by micro-computed tomography (microCT), bright field and dark field imaging revealed that they are reduced in size but did not exhibit overt cataracts at this age. Overall, this study reveals that congenital microphthalmia as assessed by axial length, or microphakia, as assessed by lens thickness, are not typical in human aniridia, although these are primary manifestations of Pax6 mutations in mice, suggesting that PAX6 regulates some aspects of lens development differently between these species.
AB - Congenital aniridia is caused by heterozygous mutations in the PAX6 gene. In this disease, congenital iris and foveal hypoplasia is associated with juvenile onset cataract, glaucoma, and corneal keratopathy. In rodents, Pax6 mutations result in a congenital reduction in ocular size that is not typically described in human aniridia. Here, the ocular morphometry of aniridia patients is compared with the lens phenotype of Pax6+/tm1/Pgr mice to reveal whether there are species differences in Pax6 regulation of lens development and homeostasis. Ultrasound biometry (UBM) revealed that eleven percent of aniridia patients exhibited mild microphthalmia while the anterior chamber depth of aniridic eyes was significantly reduced from 6 months of age onward. Although aniridic lens thickness was normal from birth, it was significantly decreased in aniridic lenses older than 30. Notably, 86% of aniridic lenses exhibited cataractous changes in this cohort. In addition, a significant proportion of aniridia patients develop lens subluxation as they age associated with reduced lens diameter as measured by anterior segment optical coherence tomography (AS-OCT). Analysis of young adult Pax6+/tm1/Pgr mouse lenses by micro-computed tomography (microCT), bright field and dark field imaging revealed that they are reduced in size but did not exhibit overt cataracts at this age. Overall, this study reveals that congenital microphthalmia as assessed by axial length, or microphakia, as assessed by lens thickness, are not typical in human aniridia, although these are primary manifestations of Pax6 mutations in mice, suggesting that PAX6 regulates some aspects of lens development differently between these species.
KW - Aniridia
KW - Haploinsufficiency
KW - Lens
KW - Morphometry
KW - PAX6
KW - Sey
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U2 - 10.1016/j.exer.2020.108371
DO - 10.1016/j.exer.2020.108371
M3 - Article
C2 - 33248069
AN - SCOPUS:85098650723
SN - 0014-4835
VL - 203
JO - Experimental Eye Research
JF - Experimental Eye Research
M1 - 108371
ER -