| Literature DB >> 34573386 |
Daniel A Balikov1, Adam Jacobson1, Lev Prasov1,2.
Abstract
Monogenic syndromic disorders frequently feature ocular manifestations, one of which is glaucoma. In many cases, glaucoma in children may go undetected, especially in those that have other severe systemic conditions that affect other parts of the eye and the body. Similarly, glaucoma may be the first presenting sign of a systemic syndrome. Awareness of syndromes associated with glaucoma is thus critical both for medical geneticists and ophthalmologists. In this review, we highlight six categories of disorders that feature glaucoma and other ocular or systemic manifestations: anterior segment dysgenesis syndromes, aniridia, metabolic disorders, collagen/vascular disorders, immunogenetic disorders, and nanophthalmos. The genetics, ocular and systemic features, and current and future treatment strategies are discussed. Findings from rare diseases also uncover important genes and pathways that may be involved in more common forms of glaucoma, and potential novel therapeutic strategies to target these pathways.Entities:
Keywords: Aicardi–Goutieres syndrome; Axenfeld–Rieger syndrome; Peter’s anomaly; Singleton–Merten syndrome; Stickler syndrome; aniridia; anterior segment dysgenesis; juvenile open-angle glaucoma; mucopolysaccharidosis; nanophthalmos; osteogenesis imperfecta; pediatric glaucoma
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34573386 PMCID: PMC8471311 DOI: 10.3390/genes12091403
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.096
Features of glaucoma syndromes.
| Syndrome | Known Genes (Inheritance Pattern) | Ocular Features | Systemic Features |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Posterior embyotoxon, corectopia, iris hypoplasia, polycoria, dysplastic angle structures, glaucoma | Axenfeld–Rieger syndrome: dental hypoplasia, flat mid-face, umbilical abnormalities, pituitary abnormalities, cardiac defects, sensorineural hearing loss, myotonic dystrophy | |
|
| PITX2 (AD) | Central corneal opacities, iris synechiae, absence of corneal endothelium, absence of descemet membrane, glaucoma | Peters Plus syndrome: short stature, abnormal ears, brachyomorphism |
|
| Iris hypoplasia (total or partial), limbal stem cell deficiency, keratopathy, cataracts, foveal hypoplasia, optic nerve hypoplasia, nystagmus, glaucoma | WAGR syndrome: Wilms tumor, genitourinary abnormalities, mental retardation | |
|
| Myopia, cataracts, retinal detachments, elongated ciliary processes, glaucoma | Midface hypoplasia, cleft palate, glossoptosis, sensorineural hearing loss, short stature, arthropathy | |
|
| Corneal thinning, scleral thinning (blue sclera), low ocular rigidity short axial length, retinal detachment, glaucoma | Bone fragility, low bone mineral density skeletal deformities, dentinogenesis imperfecta, hyperlaxity of ligaments, cardiovascular disease, hearing loss | |
|
| Anterior segment dysgenesis similar to Axenfeld–Rieger syndrome | Cerebrovascular abnormalities, leukoencephalopathy, cardiac abnormalities, renal abnormalities, muscular abnormalities | |
|
| Primary congenital glaucoma | None | |
|
|
| Congenital glaucoma, optic atrophy, cortical blindness | Encephalopathy, microcephaly leukodystrophy, cerebral atrophy, intracranial calcifications, hepatosplenomegaly, thrombocytopenia, lupus-like syndrome |
|
|
| Congenital or juvenile open-angle glaucoma | Psoriasiform rash, vascular calcifications skeletal dysplasia, tendon rupture, arthritis, dental anomalies |
|
|
| Axial hyperopia, esotropia, foveal hypoplasia, optic disc drusen, retinoschisis/foveoschisis, retinitis pigmentosa, chorioretinal folds, central retinal vein occlusions, angle closure glaucoma | Cardiac-urogenital syndrome (CUGS): Diaphragmatic hernia, cardiopulmonary vascular anomalies (i.e., Scimitar syndrome), pulmonary hypoplasia, urogenital anomalies |
AD: autosomal dominant; AR: autosomal recessive.
Clinical and molecular features mucopolysaccharidosis subtypes.
| Type | Subtype | Eponym | Defective Enzyme | Accumulated GAG | Gene Locus | Inheritance | Corneal Clouding | Glaucoma | Optic Neuropathy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | IH | Hurler | α-L-Iduronidase | HS, DS | 4p16.3 | AR | + → +++ | +/++ | +/++ |
| I H/S | Hurler-Scheie | α-L-Iduronidase | HS, DS | 4p16.3 | AR | +/++ | ++ | ++ | |
| IS | Scheie | α-L-Iduronidase | HS, DS | 4p16.3 | AR | + → +++ | +/++ | +/++ | |
| II | Hunter | Iduronate-2-sulfatase | HS, DS | Xq28 | XL recessive | Clear/+ | + | None → ++ | |
| III | A | Sanfilippo A | Heparan-N-sulfatase | HS | 17q25.3 | AR | + | + | + |
| B | Sanfilippo B | α-N-acetylglucosaminidase | HS | 17q21 | AR | + | + | + | |
| C | Sanfilippo C | α-glucosaminidase-acetyltranferase | HS | 8p11.1 | AR | + | + | + | |
| D | Sanfilippo D | N-acetylglucosamine-6-sulfatase | HS | 12q14 | AR | + | + | + | |
| IV | A | Morquino A | N-acetylgalactosamine-6-sulfatase | KS | 16q24 | AR | + | + | None → + |
| B | Morquino B | β-galactosidase | KS | 16q24 | AR | + | + | None → + | |
| VI | Maroteaux-Lamy | N-acetylgalactosamine-4-sulfatase | DS | 5q12 | AR | +++ | ++ | None → ++ | |
| VII | Sly | β-D-glucuronidase | HS, DS, KS | 7q22 | AR | +/++ | ++ | None → ++ | |
| IX | Natowicz | Hyaluronidase | CS | 3p21.2–3 | AR | unknown | unknown | unknown |
GAG: glycosaminoglycan, DS: dermatan sulfate, KS: keratan sulphate, CS: chondroitin sulphate, AR: autosomal recessive, XL: X-linked.