Abstract

BackgroundPopulation studies suggest that genetic factors play an important role in refractive error development; however, the precise role of genetic background and the composition of the signaling pathways underlying refractive eye development remain poorly understood.MethodsHere, we analyzed normal refractive development and susceptibility to form-deprivation myopia in the eight progenitor mouse strains of the Collaborative Cross (CC). We used RNA-seq to analyze gene expression in the retinae of these mice and reconstruct genetic networks and signaling pathways underlying refractive eye development. We also utilized genome-wide gene-based association analysis to identify mouse genes and pathways associated with myopia in humans.ResultsGenetic background strongly influenced both baseline refractive development and susceptibility to environmentally-induced myopia. Baseline refractive errors ranged from − 21.2 diopters (D) in 129S1/svlmj mice to + 22.0 D in CAST/EiJ mice and represented a continuous distribution typical of a quantitative genetic trait. The extent of induced form-deprivation myopia ranged from − 5.6 D in NZO/HILtJ mice to − 20.0 D in CAST/EiJ mice and also followed a continuous distribution. Whole-genome (RNA-seq) gene expression profiling in retinae from CC progenitor strains identified genes whose expression level correlated with either baseline refractive error or susceptibility to myopia. Expression levels of 2,302 genes correlated with the baseline refractive state of the eye, whereas 1,917 genes correlated with susceptibility to induced myopia. Genome-wide gene-based association analysis in the CREAM and UK Biobank human cohorts revealed that 985 of the above genes were associated with myopia in humans, including 847 genes which were implicated in the development of human myopia for the first time. Although the gene sets controlling baseline refractive development and those regulating susceptibility to myopia overlapped, these two processes appeared to be controlled by largely distinct sets of genes.ConclusionsComparison with data for other animal models of myopia revealed that the genes identified in this study comprise a well-defined set of retinal signaling pathways, which are highly conserved across different vertebrate species. These results identify major signaling pathways involved in refractive eye development and provide attractive targets for the development of anti-myopia drugs.

Highlights

  • Population studies suggest that genetic factors play an important role in refractive error development; the precise role of genetic background and the composition of the signaling pathways underlying refractive eye development remain poorly understood

  • Comparison with data for other animal models of myopia revealed that the genes identified in this study comprise a well-defined set of retinal signaling pathways, which are highly conserved across different vertebrate species

  • These results identify major signaling pathways involved in refractive eye development and provide attractive targets for the development of anti-myopia drugs

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Population studies suggest that genetic factors play an important role in refractive error development; the precise role of genetic background and the composition of the signaling pathways underlying refractive eye development remain poorly understood. Myopia often leads to serious blinding complications such as myopic maculopathy, retinal floaters, chorioretinal atrophy, retinoschisis, retinal tears, retinal detachment, and myopic macular degeneration [8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24] It represents a major risk factor for a number of other serious ocular pathologies such as cataract and glaucoma [9, 10, 25,26,27]. Because of the increasing prevalence, myopia is rapidly becoming one of the leading causes of vision loss in several parts of the world, and World Health Organization designated myopia as one of five priority health conditions [1, 8,9,10, 28]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call