Glaucoma is a leading cause of irreversible blindness and visual disability that has a major impact on the quality of life and productivity of millions o Americans. With no new pharmaceutical classes for treating glaucoma introduced into clinical practice since the 1990s, there remains a continuing need for improved regimes that treat glaucoma more effectively. Our long-term goal is to contribute to the development of these improved therapies by utilizing synergistic genetic approaches with mice and humans. Here, we focus on a sub-type of glaucoma, pigmentary glaucoma, and its major risk factor, pigment dispersion syndrome. Pigment dispersion is an alarmingly common condition characterized by aberrant release and collection of pigment throughout the anterior chamber of the eye. In most people, pigment dispersion causes no significant problems. However, in others, pigment dispersion leads to elevated intraocular pressure and pigmentary glaucoma. The factors initiating pigment dispersion and determining these very different potential outcomes are largely unknown. Our central hypothesis is that dispersed pigment elicits active, modifiable, physiological responses by the trabecular meshwork that are shaped by genetics and that dictate whether or not the insult progresses to secondary glaucoma. Using human genetics, we are studying families affected by pigment dispersion to identify genetic factors causing initiation of pigment dispersion. Using approaches with mice, we have developed an inducible mouse model for studying physiological responses to pigment dispersion and identified genetic suppressors of pigmentary glaucoma for studying potential treatments. Our objective in this proposal is to utilize and build on these resources to study molecular events contributing to pigment dispersion and its conversion to pigmentary glaucoma. To accomplish this, we propose: (SA1) to identify genes linked with pigmentary glaucoma using human genetics, (SA2) to define predictors of ocular responses to pigment dispersion using inducible mouse models, and (SA3) to identify suppressors of pigmentary glaucoma using mouse models.
Glaucoma is a leading cause of irreversible blindness. Our research focuses on studies of pigmentary glaucoma, a common sub-type of glaucoma. The results will provide insight into the molecular pathways that lead to disease and may offer a pathway toward deployment of new glaucoma therapeutics.
Showing the most recent 10 out of 35 publications