First-time analyses of glaucoma across multiple ancestries find new genetic variants.
In the largest genome-wide association study of glaucoma to date, which compared the genes of 34,179 people with the disease to 349,321 control participants, an international consortium of researchers identified 44 new gene loci and confirmed 83 previously reported loci linked to glaucoma. Loci are considered “genetic street addresses,” denoting a specific location on a gene.
The study’s authors hope the identification of these genes will lead to new treatment targets for this incurable eye disease that is a leading cause of blindness worldwide.
“These new findings come out of the highest-powered genome-wide association study of glaucoma to date, and show the power of team science and using big data to answer questions when research groups around the world join forces,” said co-senior study author Janey L. Wiggs, the Paul Austin Chandler Professor of Ophthalmology and vice chair for clinical research at Harvard Medical School and associate chief of ophthalmology clinical research at Mass Eye and Ear. “The number of genes identified will lead to the discovery of new biological pathways that can lead to glaucoma and, in turn, new targets for therapeutics,” added Wiggs, the associate director of the Ocular Genomics Institute at HMS.
The findings were published in Nature Communications.
Glaucoma affects more than 75 million individuals worldwide, including about 3 million people in the United States, and these numbers are expected to increase with the aging population. Glaucoma causes irreversible damage to the eye’s optic nerve. This damage is often painless and hard to detect at first, but over time can lead to vision loss. Primary open-angle glaucoma is one of the most common forms of the disease and is highly hereditary, but the genes involved in the disease have been poorly understood.
First cross-ancestry comparison of glaucoma genes
For the first time in a glaucoma genome-wide association study, a cross-ancestry comparison was performed looking at genetic data from people of European, African, and Asian descent. The researchers found that the majority of loci that contribute to glaucoma were consistent across all three groups. Previous studies had mostly looked at gene data from people of European descent.
“Glaucoma rates are highest in African and Asian ancestry groups, but the largest genetic studies of glaucoma in the past focused on people of European ancestry,” said lead author Puya Gharahkhani, associate professor in the Statistical Genetics Laboratory at QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute in Australia, adding that “Those studies showed genetic tests could be used to help identify who would benefit from sight-saving early monitoring or treatment, but because of the confines of the genetic data, we weren’t sure until now that the genetic indicators were true for people of different ancestries.”
The cross-ancestry data improved fine-mapping of causal variants linked to glaucoma. By integrating multiple lines of genetic evidence, the researchers implicated previously unknown biological processes that might contribute to the development of the disease.
Genetic findings may lead to better testing and clinical trial targets
Future initiatives for the research group will focus on using these genetic loci to improve screening and diagnosis of glaucoma and eventually develop new treatments.
Previous studies from the group used genes identified to develop polygenic risk scores, which are estimates of a person’s disease risk. This new study can add a larger collection of genetic variants to improve this risk score’s specificity. Such information can be important for screening patients who might be at risk for glaucoma, and for allowing patients with glaucoma to better understand their disease course based on their genetic profile. Studies are planned to identify how patients at higher genetic risk fare clinically, such as determining whether polygenic risk score is linked to a need for eye drops or surgery.
Another future avenue for the research is identifying new causal genes and mechanisms for glaucoma, and using that information to develop therapeutic approaches to target those genes. The identified risk loci include genes highly expressed in relevant eye tissues, nerves, arteries, and other tissues related to glaucoma.
Current glaucoma treatments are aimed at reducing eye pressure in order to slow the disease’s progression and prevent permanent damage to the optic nerve. However, no treatment can stop or cure glaucoma. While some current clinical trials are looking at treatments for certain genes, these new findings might increase the number of targets and lead to more precise treatments.
“Glaucoma is one of the most strongly genetic human diseases, which is why we are looking at the genetic architecture of the disease to find clues on how to prevent and treat it,” said Stuart MacGregor, professor and group leader of QIMR Berghofer’s Statistical Genetics lab and co-senior researcher on the study. “We’re hopeful that understanding the biological processes and knowing which genes control them could help scientists develop new drugs in the future.”
Source: HMS