A common haplotype in the complement regulatory gene factor H ( <i>HF1/CFH</i> ) predisposes individuals to age-related macular degeneration

Gregory S. Hageman(University of Iowa), Don H. Anderson(University of Iowa), Lincoln V. Johnson(University of Iowa), Lisa S. Hancox(University of Iowa), Andrew J. Taiber(University of Iowa), Lisa I. Hardisty(University of Iowa), Jill L. Hageman(University of Iowa), Heather Stockman(University of Iowa), James D. Borchardt(University of Iowa), Karen M. Gehrs(University of Iowa), Richard J. Smith(University of Iowa), Giuliana Silvestri(University of Iowa), Stephen R. Russell(University of Iowa), Caroline C. W. Klaver(University of Iowa), Irene Barbazetto(University of Iowa), Stanley Chang(University of Iowa), Lawrence A. Yannuzzi(University of Iowa), Gaetano R. Barile(University of Iowa), John C. Merriam(University of Iowa), R. Theodore Smith(University of Iowa), Adam Olsh(University of Iowa), Julie Bergeron(University of Iowa), Jana Zernant(University of Iowa), Joanna E. Merriam(University of Iowa), Bert Gold(University of Iowa), Michael Dean(University of Iowa), Rando Allikmets(University of Iowa)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
May 3, 2005
Cited by 1,966Open Access
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Abstract

Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is the most frequent cause of irreversible blindness in the elderly in developed countries. Our previous studies implicated activation of complement in the formation of drusen, the hallmark lesion of AMD. Here, we show that factor H (HF1), the major inhibitor of the alternative complement pathway, accumulates within drusen and is synthesized by the retinal pigmented epithelium. Because previous linkage analyses identified chromosome 1q25-32, which harbors the factor H gene (HF1/CFH), as an AMD susceptibility locus, we analyzed HF1 for genetic variation in two independent cohorts comprised of approximately 900 AMD cases and 400 matched controls. We found association of eight common HF1 SNPs with AMD; two common missense variants exhibit highly significant associations (I62V, chi2 = 26.1 and P = 3.2 x 10(-7) and Y402H, chi2 = 54.4 and P = 1.6 x 10(-13)). Haplotype analysis reveals that multiple HF1 variants confer elevated or reduced risk of AMD. One common at-risk haplotype is present at a frequency of 50% in AMD cases and 29% in controls [odds ratio (OR) = 2.46, 95% confidence interval (1.95-3.11)]. Homozygotes for this haplotype account for 24% of cases and 8% of controls [OR = 3.51, 95% confidence interval (2.13-5.78)]. Several protective haplotypes are also identified (OR = 0.44-0.55), further implicating HF1 function in the pathogenetic mechanisms underlying AMD. We propose that genetic variation in a regulator of the alternative complement pathway, when combined with a triggering event, such as infection, underlie a major proportion of AMD in the human population.


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