Refractive error (RE) and myopia are complex polygenic conditions with the majority of genome-wide associated genetic variants in non-exonic regions. Given this, and the onset during childhood, gene-r Show more
Refractive error (RE) and myopia are complex polygenic conditions with the majority of genome-wide associated genetic variants in non-exonic regions. Given this, and the onset during childhood, gene-regulation is expected to play an important role in its pathogenesis. This prompted us to explore beyond traditional gene finding approaches. We performed a genetic association study between variants in non-coding RNAs and enhancers, and RE and myopia. We obtained single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in microRNA (miRNA) genes, miRNA-binding sites, long non-coding RNAs genes (lncRNAs) and enhancers from publicly available databases: miRNASNPv2, PolymiRTS, VISTA Enhancer Browser, FANTOM5 and lncRNASNP2. We investigated whether SNPs overlapping these elements were associated with RE and myopia leveraged from a large GWAS meta-analysis (N = 160,420). With genetic risk scores (GRSs) per element, we investigated the joint effect of associated variants on RE, axial length (AL)/corneal radius (CR), and AL progression in an independent child cohort, the Generation R Study (N = 3638 children). We constructed a score for biological plausibility per SNP in highly confident miRNA-binding sites and enhancers in chromatin accessible regions. We found that SNPs in two miRNA genes, 14 enhancers and 81 lncRNA genes in chromatin accessible regions and 54 highly confident miRNA-binding sites, were in RE and myopia-associated loci. GRSs from SNPs in enhancers were significantly associated with RE, AL/CR and AL progression. GRSs from lncRNAs were significantly associated with all AL/CR and AL progression. GRSs from miRNAs were not associated with any ocular biometric measurement. GRSs from miRNA-binding sites showed suggestive but inconsistent significance. We prioritized candidate miRNA binding sites and candidate enhancers for future functional validation. Pathways of target and host genes of highly ranked variants included eye development (BMP4, MPPED2), neurogenesis (DDIT4, NTM), extracellular matrix (ANTXR2, BMP3), photoreceptor metabolism (DNAJB12), photoreceptor morphogenesis (CHDR1), neural signaling (VIPR2) and TGF-beta signaling (ANAPC16). This is the first large-scale study of non-coding RNAs and enhancers for RE and myopia. Enhancers and lncRNAs could be of large importance as they are associated with childhood myopia. We provide a confident blueprint for future functional validation by prioritizing candidate miRNA binding sites and candidate enhancers. Show less
The current study aimed to identify metabolites associated with age-related macular degeneration (AMD) by performing the largest metabolome association analysis in AMD to date, as well as aiming to de Show more
The current study aimed to identify metabolites associated with age-related macular degeneration (AMD) by performing the largest metabolome association analysis in AMD to date, as well as aiming to determine the effect of AMD-associated genetic variants on metabolite levels and investigate associations between the identified metabolites and activity of the complement system, one of the main AMD-associated disease pathways. Case-control association analysis of metabolomics data. Five European cohorts consisting of 2267 AMD patients and 4266 control participants. Metabolomics was performed using a high-throughput proton nuclear magnetic resonance metabolomics platform, which allows quantification of 146 metabolite measurements and 79 derivative values. Metabolome-AMD associations were studied using univariate logistic regression analyses. The effect of 52 AMD-associated genetic variants on the identified metabolites was investigated using linear regression. In addition, associations between the identified metabolites and activity of the complement pathway (defined by the C3d-to-C3 ratio) were investigated using linear regression. Metabolites associated with AMD. We identified 60 metabolites that were associated significantly with AMD, including increased levels of large and extra-large high-density lipoprotein (HDL) subclasses and decreased levels of very low-density lipoprotein (VLDL), amino acids, and citrate. Of 52 AMD-associated genetic variants, 7 variants were associated significantly with 34 of the identified metabolites. The strongest associations were identified for genetic variants located in or near genes involved in lipid metabolism (ABCA1, CETP, APOE, and LIPC) with metabolites belonging to the large and extra-large HDL subclasses. Also, 57 of 60 metabolites were associated significantly with complement activation levels, independent of AMD status. Increased large and extra-large HDL levels and decreased VLDL and amino acid levels were associated with increased complement activation. Lipoprotein levels were associated with AMD-associated genetic variants, whereas decreased essential amino acids may point to nutritional deficiencies in AMD. We observed strong associations between the vast majority of the AMD-associated metabolites and systemic complement activation levels, independent of AMD status. This may indicate biological interactions between the main AMD disease pathways and suggests that multiple pathways may need to be targeted simultaneously for successful treatment of AMD. Show less
Genetic and epidemiologic studies have shown that lipid genes and high-density lipoproteins (HDLs) are implicated in age-related macular degeneration (AMD). We studied circulating lipid levels in rela Show more
Genetic and epidemiologic studies have shown that lipid genes and high-density lipoproteins (HDLs) are implicated in age-related macular degeneration (AMD). We studied circulating lipid levels in relationship to AMD in a large European dataset. Pooled analysis of cross-sectional data. Individuals (N = 30 953) aged 50 years or older participating in the European Eye Epidemiology (E3) consortium and 1530 individuals from the Rotterdam Study with lipid subfraction data. AMD features were graded on fundus photographs using the Rotterdam classification. Routine blood lipid measurements, genetics, medication, and potential confounders were extracted from the E3 database. In a subgroup of the Rotterdam Study, lipid subfractions were identified by the Nightingale biomarker platform. Random-intercepts mixed-effects models incorporating confounders and study site as a random effect were used to estimate associations. AMD features and stage; lipid measurements. HDL was associated with an increased risk of AMD (odds ratio [OR], 1.21 per 1-mmol/l increase; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.14-1.29), whereas triglycerides were associated with a decreased risk (OR, 0.94 per 1-mmol/l increase; 95% CI, 0.91-0.97). Both were associated with drusen size. Higher HDL raised the odds of larger drusen, whereas higher triglycerides decreases the odds. LDL cholesterol reached statistical significance only in the association with early AMD (P = 0.045). Regarding lipid subfractions, the concentration of extra-large HDL particles showed the most prominent association with AMD (OR, 1.24; 95% CI, 1.10-1.40). The cholesteryl ester transfer protein risk variant (rs17231506) for AMD was in line with increased HDL levels (P = 7.7 × 10 Our study suggested that HDL cholesterol is associated with increased risk of AMD and that triglycerides are negatively associated. Both show the strongest association with early AMD and drusen. Extra-large HDL subfractions seem to be drivers in the relationship with AMD, and variants in lipid genes play a more ambiguous role in this association. Whether systemic lipids directly influence AMD or represent lipid metabolism in the retina remains to be answered. Show less
To identify genes and genetic markers associated with corneal astigmatism. A meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies (GWASs) of corneal astigmatism undertaken for 14 European ancestry (n=22,2 Show more
To identify genes and genetic markers associated with corneal astigmatism. A meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies (GWASs) of corneal astigmatism undertaken for 14 European ancestry (n=22,250) and 8 Asian ancestry (n=9,120) cohorts was performed by the Consortium for Refractive Error and Myopia. Cases were defined as having >0.75 diopters of corneal astigmatism. Subsequent gene-based and gene-set analyses of the meta-analyzed results of European ancestry cohorts were performed using VEGAS2 and MAGMA software. Additionally, estimates of single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP)-based heritability for corneal and refractive astigmatism and the spherical equivalent were calculated for Europeans using LD score regression. The meta-analysis of all cohorts identified a genome-wide significant locus near the platelet-derived growth factor receptor alpha ( In addition to replicating a previously identified genome-wide significant locus for corneal astigmatism near the Show less