Large-scale multitrait genome-wide association analyses identify hundreds of glaucoma risk loci

Author:

Han XikunORCID,Gharahkhani PuyaORCID,Hamel Andrew R.ORCID,Ong Jue ShengORCID,Rentería Miguel E.ORCID,Mehta PujaORCID,Dong XianjunORCID,Pasutto FrancescaORCID,Hammond ChristopherORCID,Young Terri L.ORCID,Hysi PirroORCID,Lotery Andrew J.ORCID,Jorgenson EricORCID,Choquet HélèneORCID,Hauser Michael,Cooke Bailey Jessica N.ORCID,Nakazawa Toru,Akiyama MasatoORCID,Shiga Yukihiro,Fuller Zachary L.,Wang XinORCID,Hewitt Alex W.ORCID,Craig Jamie E.,Pasquale Louis R.ORCID,Mackey David A.,Wiggs Janey L.ORCID,Khawaja Anthony P.ORCID,Segrè Ayellet V.,MacGregor StuartORCID, ,

Abstract

AbstractGlaucoma, a leading cause of irreversible blindness, is a highly heritable human disease. Previous genome-wide association studies have identified over 100 loci for the most common form, primary open-angle glaucoma. Two key glaucoma-associated traits also show high heritability: intraocular pressure and optic nerve head excavation damage quantified as the vertical cup-to-disc ratio. Here, since much of glaucoma heritability remains unexplained, we conducted a large-scale multitrait genome-wide association study in participants of European ancestry combining primary open-angle glaucoma and its two associated traits (total sample size over 600,000) to substantially improve genetic discovery power (263 loci). We further increased our power by then employing a multiancestry approach, which increased the number of independent risk loci to 312, with the vast majority replicating in a large independent cohort from 23andMe, Inc. (total sample size over 2.8 million; 296 loci replicated at P < 0.05, 240 after Bonferroni correction). Leveraging multiomics datasets, we identified many potential druggable genes, including neuro-protection targets likely to act via the optic nerve, a key advance for glaucoma because all existing drugs only target intraocular pressure. We further used Mendelian randomization and genetic correlation-based approaches to identify novel links to other complex traits, including immune-related diseases such as multiple sclerosis and systemic lupus erythematosus.

Funder

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | National Eye Institute

Department of Health | National Health and Medical Research Council

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Genetics

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