VARIATION IN GENE THAT REGULATES IMMUNE
RESPONSE CAUSES
AGE-RELATED MACULAR
DEGENERATION WHEN TRIGGERED, STUDY SHOWS
Columbia
University/University of Iowa Study Suggests Inflammation
And Other Immune
Responses Might Trigger Genetic Cause of Blindness in Elderly
NEW YORK, NY, April 30, 2005 – Age-related macular degeneration, the
leading cause of blindness in the elderly, occurs when a common
inherited gene variation is triggered, possibly by an infection,
according to a new study led by researchers at Columbia University
Medical Center and the University of Iowa, with an international
research team.
The gene, known as Factor H, encodes a protein that regulates immune
defense against infection caused by bacteria and viruses. People
who have an inherited variation in this gene are less able to control
inflammation caused by these infections, which may spark age-related
macular degeneration (AMD) later in life, the study finds.
Published in this week’s Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences, the results suggest that targeting the molecules involved in
immune system response may provide powerful new therapies for treating
and preventing AMD.
“We now understand the genetic variation that is behind age-related
macular degeneration and are beginning to target the trigger that sets
the process in motion,” said Rando Allikmets, Ph.D., Acquavella
Associate Professor in the department of ophthalmology and the
department of pathology & cell biology at Columbia University
College of Physicians and Surgeons. “By targeting the molecules
involved in inflammation and its regulation we believe we can begin to
develop therapies and diagnostic tools that could help countless people
keep their sight.”
Potential therapies could involve delivering healthy Factor H directly
to the eye to short-circuit the disease process; extracting stem cells
from the eye so they could be reengineered and re-implanted; or partial
transplantation of the liver - the body’s main source for Factor H.
Other research has recently established the link between the Factor H
gene and AMD by scanning the human genome for variations in gene
sequences, but this new research is the first to examine the roots of
AMD from a biological perspective and to explore the role that immune
response plays in triggering the disease.
More than 50 million people worldwide are estimated to have
irreversible blindness as a result of macular degeneration, making it
the most common cause of blindness for those over 60. It’s
estimated that 30 percent of the population will have some form of AMD
by the time they reach the age of seventy-five. The disease is
marked by a progressive loss of central vision due to degeneration of
the macula—a region of the retina and the area responsible for fine,
central vision.
The study was conducted in two parts – biology and genetics. Dr.
Allikmets, senior author on the paper, led the study’s genetic analysis
with patients and colleagues from the Harkness Eye Institute at
Columbia University Medical Center and NewYork Presbyterian
Hospital/Columbia, in collaboration with principal investigator Gregory
Hageman, Ph.D., professor of ophthalmology and visual sciences at the
University of Iowa Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine,
who conducted the biological research. An international team of
researchers was engaged in the project including scientists at the
National Cancer Institute, the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the
University of California at Santa Barbara (UCSB), and Queens
University, Belfast, United Kingdom.
Dr. Allikmets began his career focusing on a different disease –
cancer. As an investigator for the National Cancer Institute, in
1997 Allikmets discovered the ABCR gene (also known as ABCA4), as the
first gene involved in a substantial, but small fraction of age-related
macular degeneration. This discovery set him on the path of
pursuing research in the area of AMD genetics, and he joined Columbia
University Medical Center in 1999 to pursue this groundbreaking
research.
The researchers examined 900 AMD patients and 400 healthy controls and
noticed that half of all AMD patients have an inherited pattern of
genetic variants in the Factor H gene – known as a haplotype – that
make them more susceptible to AMD. Different haplotypes in the
Factor H gene in about one third of the population provide varied
degrees of protection from acquiring AMD.
The Iowa team also examined a large collection of donated eye samples
and observed that the activation of the immune system results in the
formation of drusen - pockets of inflammation that are the precursors
to AMD.
The new findings link variations on the Factor H gene – which was found
to be accumulated in drusen - directly to the process leading to
AMD. The study found that compared to control subjects, patients
with AMD were more likely to have single nucleotide polymorphisms that
weaken the ability of Factor H to inhibit the immune response – known
as the alternative complement cascade - thus making them more
susceptible to inflammation and the disease.
While it would seem that “anti-inflammatory” drugs could mitigate the
inflammatory onslaught, the researchers say most do not work on this
leg of the complement system.
The genetic pre-disposition to AMD exists in approximately half of the
Caucasian population. But not everyone who has this genetic
variant gets AMD, so what causes this mechanism to activate?
“We believe inflammation from infections might kick start the process
that leads to AMD,” said Dr. Hageman. “The variation in Factor H
strengthens the immune response, keeping infections under control
early, but ironically that may contribute to a chronic disease like AMD
later in life.”
The Columbia and Iowa scientists were able to make this connection in
large measure by studying a rare form of kidney disease called MPGN
II. Patients with this condition often share the same kind of eye
lesions as individuals with AMD. And, in fact, a genetic
determinant of the two diseases had been previously linked to the same
chromosome - chromosome 1. Thus, Factor H was thought to be a
prime suspect in both diseases.
“It has been always assumed that AMD must have environmental triggers
that turn on or aid the pathological process. Our research
suggests that the trigger is a specific inducer of the alternative
complement pathway, such as an infection, systemic disease, a
vaccination, or another unusual agent. Interestingly, countries
where the vaccination rate is highest also experience an elevated rate
of AMD,” said Dr. Allikmets.
The researchers continue to conduct new studies based on their results
to further understand the triggers for this gene.
“This is an area for epidemiologists to study, but as our research
progresses we should eventually be in a position to suggest treatment
that could keep many people from going blind,” he said.
The research was supported by the National Institutes of Health,
American Macular Degeneration Foundation, International Retina Research
Foundation, Eye Research Institute, Pfizer, Foundation Fighting
Blindness, Ruth and Milton Steinbach Fund, and Research to Prevent
Blindness, Inc.
###
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