Scleral HIF-1α is a prominent regulatory candidate for genetic and environmental interactions in human myopia pathogenesis

Fei Zhao(Affiliated Eye Hospital of Wenzhou Medical College), Dake Zhang(Beihang University), Qingyi Zhou(Affiliated Eye Hospital of Wenzhou Medical College), Fuxin Zhao(Wenzhou Medical University), Mingguang He(Centre for Eye Research Australia), Zhenglin Yang(University of Electronic Science and Technology of China), Yong‐Chao Su(Wenzhou Medical University), Ying Zhai(Affiliated Eye Hospital of Wenzhou Medical College), Jiaofeng Yan(Affiliated Eye Hospital of Wenzhou Medical College), Guoyun Zhang(Affiliated Eye Hospital of Wenzhou Medical College), Anquan Xue(Affiliated Eye Hospital of Wenzhou Medical College), Jing Tang(Affiliated Eye Hospital of Wenzhou Medical College), Xiaotong Han(Sun Yat-sen University), Yi Shi(University of Electronic Science and Technology of China), Yun Zhu(Wenzhou Medical University), Tianzi Liu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Wenjuan Zhuang(Northwest University), Lulin Huang(University of Electronic Science and Technology of China), Yaqiang Hong(Beijing Institute of Genomics), Deng Wu(Beijing Institute of Genomics), Yingxiang Li, Qinkang Lu, Wei Chen(Beihang University), Shiming Jiao(Wenzhou Medical University), Qiongsi Wang(Affiliated Eye Hospital of Wenzhou Medical College), Nethrajeith Srinivasalu(Wenzhou Medical University), Yingying Wen(Wenzhou Medical University), Changqing Zeng(Beijing Institute of Genomics), Jia Qu(Affiliated Eye Hospital of Wenzhou Medical College), Xiangtian Zhou(Wenzhou Medical University)
EBioMedicine
July 1, 2020
Cited by 172Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Myopia is a good model for understanding the interaction between genetics and environmental stimuli. Here we dissect the biological processes affecting myopia progression. METHODS: Human Genetic Analyses: (1) gene set analysis (GSA) of new genome wide association study (GWAS) data for 593 individuals with high myopia (refraction ≤ -6 diopters [D]); (2) over-representation analysis (ORA) of 196 genes with de novo mutations, identified by whole genome sequencing of 45 high-myopia trio families, and (3) ORA of 284 previously reported myopia risk genes. Contributions of the enriched signaling pathways in mediating the genetic and environmental interactions during myopia development were investigated in vivo and in vitro. RESULTS: All three genetic analyses showed significant enrichment of four KEGG signaling pathways, including amphetamine addiction, extracellular matrix (ECM) receptor interaction, neuroactive ligand-receptor interaction, and regulation of actin cytoskeleton pathways. In individuals with extremely high myopia (refraction ≤ -10 D), the GSA of GWAS data revealed significant enrichment of the HIF-1α signaling pathway. Using human scleral fibroblasts, silencing the key nodal genes within protein-protein interaction networks for the enriched pathways antagonized the hypoxia-induced increase in myofibroblast transdifferentiation. In mice, scleral HIF-1α downregulation led to hyperopia, whereas upregulation resulted in myopia. In human subjects, near work, a risk factor for myopia, significantly decreased choroidal blood perfusion, which might cause scleral hypoxia. INTERPRETATION: Our study implicated the HIF-1α signaling pathway in promoting human myopia through mediating interactions between genetic and environmental factors. FUNDING: National Natural Science Foundation of China grants; Natural Science Foundation of Zhejiang Province.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis