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Durham, N.C. An interaction between cigarette smoking and a
susceptibility gene, called LOC387715, greatly increases the risk of
developing age-related macular degeneration (AMD), Duke University
Medical Center and Vanderbilt University Medical Center have found.
The combination of these factors accounts for as many as one third of
the cases of AMD, the researchers estimated. The study represents one of
the first examples of an interaction between genetic and environmental
factors in the development of a common disease, they said.
The researchers said their findings emphasize the importance of genetic
factors in the onset of AMD. They also said that the research has the
potential to reduce the impact of the version, or allele, of the
LOC387715 gene on the aging population by public health efforts, such as
smoking prevention and cessation programs.
The results of the Duke research will appear March 6, 2006, in the
online edition of the American Journal of Human Genetics, to be
published in print in the May issue of the journal. The work was
supported by the National Eye Institute of the National Institutes of
Health.
"The most exciting aspect of this research is that it is the combination
of the gene and smoking that really puts you at risk," said Margaret
Pericak-Vance, Ph.D., director of the Duke Center for Human Genetics and
senior author of the report. "We demonstrate, for the first time, that a
gene variant coupled with a modifiable lifestyle factor such as
cigarette smoking confers a significantly higher risk of AMD than either
factor alone."
AMD is the most common cause of visual impairment and legal blindness in
older Americans. The condition leads to blindness by progressively
destroying the central portion of the retina, an area known as the
macula. Today, ten to fifteen million people in the United States have
AMD, and that number is expected to double as the baby boomer generation
ages.
"Several environmental factors have been implicated in AMD," said
Jonathan Haines, Ph.D., of Vanderbilt Center for Human Genetics
Research, a co-author in the study. "The strongest effect comes from
smoking, which is why we included it in this study. Another risk factor
is family history, which led us to look for the genes involved."
The study was conducted in 1,001 people with all forms of AMD and 394
unrelated healthy controls. The team evaluated 185 variations in the DNA
sequences of genes found in a particular region of the genome that other
genetic studies had implicated in susceptibility to AMD.
The researchers found that 42 percent of the chromosomes of people with
AMD, compared with 26 percent of controls, had a specific sequence
variant of LOC387715 statistically associated with the highest risk of
developing the disease. Their analysis showed that in non-smokers, the
genetic variant confers a two-fold increase in AMD risk. However, in
smokers who carry the genetic variant, the risk is increased about
eight-fold, compared to non-smokers without the variant. The actual
function of the gene in the visual system is unknown, noted the
researchers.
"We found that the gene variant increases AMD risk even if a person does
not smoke," said Silke Schmidt, Ph.D., first author of the study. "If
the person does smoke and has a bad genotype, the risk increases
dramatically. This suggests that gene carriers can reduce their AMD risk
substantially by not smoking."
The new study of LOC387715 represents discovery of the second major
susceptibility gene for AMD. An earlier study by this group and others
identified the first major genetic risk factor for the disease, a gene
called complement factor H (CFH). CFH is believed to play a role in the
regulation of the immune system.
The joint effect of the two variants and smoking may be responsible for
up to 61 percent of all cases of AMD, said the researchers. The finding
might also give those at greatest risk for developing the condition a
chance to undergo therapies or quit smoking to slow the progression of
the disease, they said.
Once AMD reaches the advanced stage, no treatment can prevent or restore
vision loss. However, people can delay and possibly prevent AMD from
progressing. They can take a high-dose formulation of antioxidants and
zinc to significantly reduce the risk of advanced AMD and its associated
vision loss. Because obesity is a risk factor, weight reduction by
maintaining a healthy diet and exercising can also reduce the risk of
developing AMD.
For the more severe form, people with AMD can undergo treatments
including laser surgery and drug injections to seal the leaking blood
vessels, halting the damage they can inflict upon the retina. In laser
surgery a high energy light beam is aimed directly onto the new blood
vessels and destroys them, preventing further loss of vision. An
alternative treatment is the injection of a drug to block the growth of
abnormal new blood vessels, again slowing vision loss from AMD.
The discovery gives researchers a chance to further understand AMD,
explained Pericak-Vance. The hope is that this information could
ultimately lead to better treatments and prevention for those afflicted
with the disease.
"You can not change your genetics," explained study co-author Eric
Postel, M.D., an ophthalmologist at the Duke Eye Center, "but there are
things you can do to reduce your risk. You can change your diet, take
vitamins, and stop smoking."
Collaborators on the study include Michael Hauser, William Scott, Paul
Gallins, Frank Wong and Yu Sarah Chen, of the Duke Center for Human
Genetics; Kylee Spencer, Nathalie Schnetz-Boutaud, and Anita Agarwal, of
the Vanderbilt University Medical Center.
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