| Literature DB >> 26307087 |
Michael A Hauser1, Inas F Aboobakar2, Yutao Liu3, Shiroh Miura4, Benjamin T Whigham4, Pratap Challa2, Joshua Wheeler4, Andrew Williams5, Cecelia Santiago-Turla2, Xuejun Qin4, Robyn M Rautenbach6, Ari Ziskind6, Michèle Ramsay7, Steffen Uebe8, Lingyun Song9, Alexias Safi9, Eranga N Vithana10, Takanori Mizoguchi11, Satoko Nakano12, Toshiaki Kubota12, Ken Hayashi13, Shin-ichi Manabe13, Shigeyasu Kazama14, Yosai Mori15, Kazunori Miyata16, Nagahisa Yoshimura17, Andre Reis8, Gregory E Crawford9, Francesca Pasutto8, Trevor R Carmichael18, Susan E I Williams18, Mineo Ozaki19, Tin Aung10, Chiea-Chuen Khor10, W Daniel Stamer2, Allison E Ashley-Koch4, R Rand Allingham20.
Abstract
Exfoliation syndrome (XFS) is a common, age-related, systemic fibrillinopathy. It greatly increases risk of exfoliation glaucoma (XFG), a major worldwide cause of irreversible blindness. Coding variants in the lysyl oxidase-like 1 (LOXL1) gene are strongly associated with XFS in all studied populations, but a functional role for these variants has not been established. To identify additional candidate functional variants, we sequenced the entire LOXL1 genomic locus (∼40 kb) in 50 indigenous, black South African XFS cases and 50 matched controls. The variants with the strongest evidence of association were located in a well-defined 7-kb region bounded by the 3'-end of exon 1 and the adjacent region of intron 1 of LOXL1. We replicated this finding in US Caucasian (91 cases/1031 controls), German (771 cases/1365 controls) and Japanese (1484 cases/1188 controls) populations. The region of peak association lies upstream of LOXL1-AS1, a long non-coding RNA (lncRNA) encoded on the opposite strand of LOXL1. We show that this region contains a promoter and, importantly, that the strongly associated XFS risk alleles in the South African population are functional variants that significantly modulate the activity of this promoter. LOXL1-AS1 expression is also significantly altered in response to oxidative stress in human lens epithelial cells and in response to cyclic mechanical stress in human Schlemm's canal endothelial cells. Taken together, these findings support a functional role for the LOXL1-AS1 lncRNA in cellular stress response and suggest that dysregulation of its expression by genetic risk variants plays a key role in XFS pathogenesis.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26307087 PMCID: PMC4614704 DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddv347
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Mol Genet ISSN: 0964-6906 Impact factor: 6.150