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Genome-wide association analyses identify two susceptibility loci for pachychoroid disease central serous chorioretinopathy.

Yoshikatsu HosodaMasahiro MiyakeRosa L SchellevisCamiel J F BoonCarel B HoyngAkiko MikiAkira MeguroYoichi SakuradaSeigo YoneyamaYukari TakasagoMasayuki HataYuki MuraokaHideo NakanishiAkio OishiSotaro OotoHiroshi TamuraAkihito UjiManabu MiyataAyako TakahashiNaoko Ueda-ArakawaAtsushi TajimaTakehiro SatoNobuhisa MizukiChieko ShiragamiTomohiro IidaChiea Chuen KhorTien Yin WongRyo YamadaShigeru HondaEiko K de JongAnneke I den HollanderFumihiko MatsudaKenji YamashiroAkitaka Tsujikawa
Published in: Communications biology (2019)
The recently emerged pachychoroid concept has changed the understanding of age-related macular degeneration (AMD), which is a major cause of blindness; recent studies attributed AMD in part to pachychoroid disease central serous chorioretinopathy (CSC), suggesting the importance of elucidating the CSC pathogenesis. Our large genome-wide association study followed by validation studies in three independent Japanese and European cohorts, consisting of 1546 CSC samples and 13,029 controls, identified two novel CSC susceptibility loci: TNFRSF10A-LOC389641 and near GATA5 (rs13278062, odds ratio = 1.35, P = 1.26 × 10-13; rs6061548, odds ratio = 1.63, P = 5.36 × 10-15). A T allele at TNFRSF10A-LOC389641 rs13278062, a risk allele for CSC, is known to be a risk allele for AMD. This study not only identified new susceptibility genes for CSC, but also improves the understanding of the pathogenesis of AMD.
Keyphrases
  • age related macular degeneration
  • genome wide association study
  • genome wide association
  • genome wide
  • high grade
  • gene expression