Back to Search Start Over

Childhood gene-environment interactions and age-dependent effects of genetic variants associated with refractive error and myopia: The CREAM Consortium

Authors :
Fan, Qiao
Guo, Xiaobo
Tideman, J Willem L
Williams, Katie M
Yazar, Seyhan
Hosseini, S Mohsen
Howe, Laura D
Pourcain, Beaté St
Evans, David M
Timpson, Nicholas J
McMahon, George
Hysi, Pirro G
Krapohl, Eva
Wang, Ya Xing
Jonas, Jost B
Baird, Paul Nigel
Wang, Jie Jin
Cheng, Ching-Yu
Teo, Yik-Ying
Wong, Tien-Yin
Ding, Xiaohu
Wojciechowski, Robert
Young, Terri L
Pärssinen, Olavi
Oexle, Konrad
Pfeiffer, Norbert
Bailey-Wilson, Joan E
Paterson, Andrew D
Klaver, Caroline CW
Plomin, Robert
Hammond, Christopher J
Mackey, David A
He, Mingguang
Saw, Seang-Mei
Williams, Cathy
Guggenheim, Jeremy A
CREAM Consortium
Hosseini, S Mohsen [0000-0003-3626-9928]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Source :
Scientific Reports
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2016.

Abstract

Myopia, currently at epidemic levels in East Asia, is a leading cause of untreatable visual impairment. Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) in adults have identified 39 loci associated with refractive error and myopia. Here, the age-of-onset of association between genetic variants at these 39 loci and refractive error was investigated in 5200 children assessed longitudinally across ages 7-15 years, along with gene-environment interactions involving the major environmental risk-factors, nearwork and time outdoors. Specific variants could be categorized as showing evidence of: (a) early-onset effects remaining stable through childhood, (b) early-onset effects that progressed further with increasing age, or (c) onset later in childhood (N = 10, 5 and 11 variants, respectively). A genetic risk score (GRS) for all 39 variants explained 0.6% (P = 6.6E-08) and 2.3% (P = 6.9E-21) of the variance in refractive error at ages 7 and 15, respectively, supporting increased effects from these genetic variants at older ages. Replication in multi-ancestry samples (combined N = 5599) yielded evidence of childhood onset for 6 of 12 variants present in both Asians and Europeans. There was no indication that variant or GRS effects altered depending on time outdoors, however 5 variants showed nominal evidence of interactions with nearwork (top variant, rs7829127 in ZMAT4; P = 6.3E-04).

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Scientific Reports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3d9eb9d5154b447e7c64d4a259d93d05