Association between the SERPING1 gene and age-related macular degeneration: a two-stage case-control study
Association between the SERPING1 gene and age-related macular degeneration: a two-stage case-control study
Background: age-related macular degeneration is the most prevalent form of visual impairment and blindness in developed countries. Genetic studies have made advancements in establishing the molecular cause of this disease, identifying mutations in the complement factor H (CFH) gene and a locus on chromosome
10 encompassing the HTRA1/LOC387715/ARMS2 genes. Variants in complement 3 (C3) and an HLA locus containing both factor B and C2 genes have also been implicated. We aimed to identify further genetic risk factors for this disease.
Methods: we used a case—control study design in a UK sample of patients with age-related macular degeneration (n=479) and controls (n=479) and undertook a low-density screen of 32 genes using 93 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Genes were selected as candidates on the basis of potential functional relevance to age-related macular degeneration. Significant initial findings were confirmed by replication in an independent US cohort of 248 unrelated patients with disease and 252 controls, and by high-density genotyping around association signals.
Findings: the SNP variant rs2511989, located within intron six of the SERPING1 gene, showed highly significant genotypic association with age-related macular degeneration (uncorrected p=4·0×10?5, corrected p=0·00372). We detected no evidence for association between disease and the other 31 candidate genes. The odds ratio for age-related macular degeneration in rs2511989 G/A heterozygotes compared with wild type G/G homozygotes was 0·63 (95% CI 0·47—0·84). A similar comparison of the A/A homozygotes with the wild type yielded an odds ratio of 0·44 (0·31—0·64). We replicated the observed genotypic association in a US cohort (p=0·008). Furthermore, a secondary high-density genotyping study across the SERPING1 gene region identified five additional SNP variants similarly associated with age-related macular degeneration (rs2244169, rs2511990, rs2509897, rs1005510, and rs2511988).
Interpretation: genetic variation in SERPING1 significantly alters susceptibility to age-related macular degeneration. SERPING1 encodes the C1 inhibitor, which has a crucial role in inhibition of complement component 1 (C1) and might implicate the classic pathway of complement activation in this disease
1828-1834
Ennis, Sarah
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Jomary, Catherine
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Mullins, Robert
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Cree, Angela
6724b71b-8828-4abb-971f-0856c2af555e
Chen, Xiaoli
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Macleod, Alex
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Jones, Stephen
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Collins, Andrew
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Stone, Edwin
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Lotery, Andrew
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22 November 2008
Ennis, Sarah
7b57f188-9d91-4beb-b217-09856146f1e9
Jomary, Catherine
ba6cc4c1-f312-4711-973f-14c95bb9c736
Mullins, Robert
1b1c7ba5-2710-4a01-b0d9-263af845bf38
Cree, Angela
6724b71b-8828-4abb-971f-0856c2af555e
Chen, Xiaoli
56681b38-c8e3-4b36-92b3-c5d29a04ece6
Macleod, Alex
397f18e2-fc27-49f3-87f7-e9a923c2dd79
Jones, Stephen
f5f68a54-a617-4a47-8022-2eeda9bef808
Collins, Andrew
7daa83eb-0b21-43b2-af1a-e38fb36e2a64
Stone, Edwin
daa8d958-0168-4fc6-b065-1fef3451b2c6
Lotery, Andrew
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Ennis, Sarah, Jomary, Catherine, Mullins, Robert, Cree, Angela, Chen, Xiaoli, Macleod, Alex, Jones, Stephen, Collins, Andrew, Stone, Edwin and Lotery, Andrew
(2008)
Association between the SERPING1 gene and age-related macular degeneration: a two-stage case-control study.
The Lancet, 372 (9652), .
(doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(08)61348-3).
(PMID:18842294)
Abstract
Background: age-related macular degeneration is the most prevalent form of visual impairment and blindness in developed countries. Genetic studies have made advancements in establishing the molecular cause of this disease, identifying mutations in the complement factor H (CFH) gene and a locus on chromosome
10 encompassing the HTRA1/LOC387715/ARMS2 genes. Variants in complement 3 (C3) and an HLA locus containing both factor B and C2 genes have also been implicated. We aimed to identify further genetic risk factors for this disease.
Methods: we used a case—control study design in a UK sample of patients with age-related macular degeneration (n=479) and controls (n=479) and undertook a low-density screen of 32 genes using 93 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Genes were selected as candidates on the basis of potential functional relevance to age-related macular degeneration. Significant initial findings were confirmed by replication in an independent US cohort of 248 unrelated patients with disease and 252 controls, and by high-density genotyping around association signals.
Findings: the SNP variant rs2511989, located within intron six of the SERPING1 gene, showed highly significant genotypic association with age-related macular degeneration (uncorrected p=4·0×10?5, corrected p=0·00372). We detected no evidence for association between disease and the other 31 candidate genes. The odds ratio for age-related macular degeneration in rs2511989 G/A heterozygotes compared with wild type G/G homozygotes was 0·63 (95% CI 0·47—0·84). A similar comparison of the A/A homozygotes with the wild type yielded an odds ratio of 0·44 (0·31—0·64). We replicated the observed genotypic association in a US cohort (p=0·008). Furthermore, a secondary high-density genotyping study across the SERPING1 gene region identified five additional SNP variants similarly associated with age-related macular degeneration (rs2244169, rs2511990, rs2509897, rs1005510, and rs2511988).
Interpretation: genetic variation in SERPING1 significantly alters susceptibility to age-related macular degeneration. SERPING1 encodes the C1 inhibitor, which has a crucial role in inhibition of complement component 1 (C1) and might implicate the classic pathway of complement activation in this disease
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Published date: 22 November 2008
Organisations:
Human Genetics, Clinical Neurosciences
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Local EPrints ID: 69790
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/69790
ISSN: 0140-6736
PURE UUID: 5920ae3c-7782-4aa7-9f4a-9be77287988a
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Date deposited: 07 Dec 2009
Last modified: 16 Aug 2024 01:40
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Author:
Catherine Jomary
Author:
Robert Mullins
Author:
Xiaoli Chen
Author:
Alex Macleod
Author:
Stephen Jones
Author:
Edwin Stone
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