Macular Degeneration, Age-Related Vision
Disorder linked to cell’s ‘power plant’
Newswise — Genetic variation in the DNA of
mitochondria – the “power plants” of cells –
contributes to a person’s risk of developing
age-related macular degeneration (AMD),
Vanderbilt investigators report May 7 in the
journal PLoS ONE.
The study is the first to examine the
mitochondrial genome for changes associated
with AMD, the leading cause of blindness in
Caucasians over age 50.
“Most people don’t realize that we have two
genomes,” said lead author Jeff Canter,
M.D., M.P.H., an investigator in the Center
for Human Genetics Research. “We have the
nuclear genome – the “human genome” – that
makes the cover of all the magazines, and
then we also have this tiny genome in
mitochondria in every cell.”
Canter teamed with Jonathan Haines, Ph.D.,
and Paul Sternberg, M.D., experts in AMD
genetics and treatment, to examine whether a
particular variation in the mitochondrial
genome is associated with the disease. The
genetic change occurs in about 10 percent of
Caucasians, referred to as mitochondrial
haplogroup T.
“We suspect that this variant will be one of
a small group of important genetic
variations that underlie AMD,” Canter said.
“By knowing this, we have a better chance of
predicting accurately who will get the
disease.”
AMD affects as many as 10 million people in
the United States, robbing them of the sharp
central vision necessary for everyday
activities like reading, driving, watching
television, and identifying faces.
The toll
of the disease is expected to mount as the
U.S. population ages.
The genetics of AMD has been a “hot” area
lately, Canter said. Haines led a team that
identified a variant in the Complement
Factor H (CFH) gene as accounting for up to
43 percent of AMD.
Variations in ApoE2 and a
gene called LOC387715 on chromosome 10 have
also been linked to the disease, and Haines
and colleagues demonstrated an interaction
between the chromosome 10 gene and smoking
in raising AMD risk.
The current study also examined variation in
these nuclear genes in 280 cases and 280
age-matched controls, and demonstrated that
the mitochondrial genome variation was
independent of the known nuclear factors.
“We’re at the stage where we can use genetic
information to predict who is likely to
develop AMD well before they actually
develop it,” said Haines, director of the
Center for Human Genetics Research.
“Now we
can conduct trials of preventive treatments
– something’s that never been possible
before.”
Sternberg, G.W. Hale Professor and Chairman
of the Vanderbilt Eye Institute, is leading
a trial to test preventive measures in AMD.
Variation in the mitochondrial genome
reflects human migrations and different
environmental exposures.
Changes in the
mitochondrial DNA can alter the efficiency
of energy generation and lead to
over-production of “reactive oxygen species”
– free radicals that can damage the cell.
“By identifying genetic changes associated
with the mitochondria, our results lend
additional confirmatory evidence for the
role of oxidative stress in AMD,” Sternberg
said.
“This supports study of interventions
that attempt to bolster our antioxidant
defenses.”
“I can see a day when physicians order
genotyping on patients at a certain age to
determine risk for AMD and put things in
place – dietary changes, antioxidants,
increased screening – that could prevent the
disease,” Canter added.
“This would be truly
personalized medicine.”
Canter emphasized that variation in the
mitochondrial genome has been linked to a
wide variety of diseases including
neurodegenerative diseases like Parkinson’s
and Alzheimer’s as well as breast cancer and
trauma survival.
“It’s important to realize that there’s
another genome in the mitochondria, and even
though there are not many genes there,
they’re important,” Canter said.
Other Vanderbilt authors of the PLoS ONE
paper include Lana Olson, Kylee Spencer,
Ph.D., Nathalie Schnetz-Boutaud, Ph.D.,
Brent Anderson and Anita Agarwal, M.D. The
National Institutes of Health supported the
research.