TY - JOUR
T1 - A novel luciferase assay for sensitively monitoring myocilin variants in cell culture
AU - Zadoo, Serena
AU - Nguyen, Annie
AU - Zode, Gulab
AU - Hulleman, John D.
N1 - Funding Information:
Supported in part by an endowment from the Roger and Dorothy Hirl Research Fund (JDH), a Career Development Award from Research to Prevent Blindness (JDH), a National Eye Institute Visual Science Core Grant (EY020799), an unrestricted grant from Research to Prevent Blindness, funding from the UT Southwestern Summer Medical Student Research Program (SZ), and a National Eye Institute R00 Grant EY022077 (GZ).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2016, Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology Inc. All rights reserved.
PY - 2016/4/1
Y1 - 2016/4/1
N2 - PURPOSE. Primary open angle glaucoma–associated mutations in myocilin (MYOC) cause protein “nonsecretion,” rendering secreted MYOC difficult to detect using conventional techniques. This study focused on developing and using an assay that can quickly and easily detect mutant MYOC secretion. METHODS. We fused Gaussia luciferase (eGLuc2) to MYOC variants and expressed the constructs in HEK-293T and NTM-5 cells. Secreted and intracellular levels of MYOC eGLuc2 variants were evaluated by Western blotting and compared to untagged and FLAG-tagged MYOC constructs. Secreted and soluble intracellular MYOC eGLuc2 were measured by a GLuc assay. The secretion of nine additional MYOC mutants was assayed in conditioned media from transfected cells to test the applicability of the assay for monitoring other MYOC variants. RESULTS. Myocilin eGLuc2 behaved similarly to untagged and FLAG-tagged MYOC with respect to secretion, soluble intracellular levels, and in response to drug treatment. The GLuc assay could sensitively detect Y437H MYOC secretion 30 minutes after media change. Gaussia luciferase fused variants followed anticipated trends; nonpathogenic variants (D208E, G244V) were secreted at wild-type (WT) levels, whereas predicted disease-causing variants (C245Y, G246R, E300K, Y437H, I477N) demonstrated substantial secretion defects. Secretion defects caused by the C245Y, G246R, and Y437H mutations were partially rescued by permissive growth temperature. Interestingly, however, this increase in secretion was independent of newly synthesized protein. CONCLUSIONS. Fusion of eGLuc2 to MYOC does not significantly change the behavior of MYOC. This newly developed MYOC reporter system can be used to study engineered MYOC variants and potentially to identify modulators of MYOC secretion and function.
AB - PURPOSE. Primary open angle glaucoma–associated mutations in myocilin (MYOC) cause protein “nonsecretion,” rendering secreted MYOC difficult to detect using conventional techniques. This study focused on developing and using an assay that can quickly and easily detect mutant MYOC secretion. METHODS. We fused Gaussia luciferase (eGLuc2) to MYOC variants and expressed the constructs in HEK-293T and NTM-5 cells. Secreted and intracellular levels of MYOC eGLuc2 variants were evaluated by Western blotting and compared to untagged and FLAG-tagged MYOC constructs. Secreted and soluble intracellular MYOC eGLuc2 were measured by a GLuc assay. The secretion of nine additional MYOC mutants was assayed in conditioned media from transfected cells to test the applicability of the assay for monitoring other MYOC variants. RESULTS. Myocilin eGLuc2 behaved similarly to untagged and FLAG-tagged MYOC with respect to secretion, soluble intracellular levels, and in response to drug treatment. The GLuc assay could sensitively detect Y437H MYOC secretion 30 minutes after media change. Gaussia luciferase fused variants followed anticipated trends; nonpathogenic variants (D208E, G244V) were secreted at wild-type (WT) levels, whereas predicted disease-causing variants (C245Y, G246R, E300K, Y437H, I477N) demonstrated substantial secretion defects. Secretion defects caused by the C245Y, G246R, and Y437H mutations were partially rescued by permissive growth temperature. Interestingly, however, this increase in secretion was independent of newly synthesized protein. CONCLUSIONS. Fusion of eGLuc2 to MYOC does not significantly change the behavior of MYOC. This newly developed MYOC reporter system can be used to study engineered MYOC variants and potentially to identify modulators of MYOC secretion and function.
KW - Gaussia luciferase
KW - Myocilin
KW - Nonsecretion
KW - Permissive growth temperature
KW - Protein folding
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U2 - 10.1167/iovs.15-18789
DO - 10.1167/iovs.15-18789
M3 - Article
C2 - 27092720
AN - SCOPUS:84964220609
SN - 0146-0404
VL - 57
SP - 1939
EP - 1950
JO - Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science
JF - Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science
IS - 4
ER -