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GWAS Study

Identification of myopia-associated WNT7B polymorphisms provides insights into the mechanism underlying the development of myopia.

Miyake M, Yamashiro K, Tabara Y et al.

25823570 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
6708 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

MM
Miyake M
YK
Yamashiro K
TY
Tabara Y
SK
Suda K
MS
Morooka S
NH
Nakanishi H
KC
Khor CC
CP
Chen P
QF
Qiao F
NI
Nakata I
AY
Akagi-Kurashige Y
GN
Gotoh N
TA
Tsujikawa A
MA
Meguro A
KS
Kusuhara S
PO
Polasek O
HC
Hayward C
WA
Wright AF
CH
Campbell H
RA
Richardson AJ
SM
Schache M
TM
Takeuchi M
MD
Mackey DA
HA
Hewitt AW
CG
Cuellar G
SY
Shi Y
HL
Huang L
YZ
Yang Z
LK
Leung KH
KP
Kao PYP
YM
Yap MKH
YS
Yip SP
MM
Moriyama M
OK
Ohno-Matsui K
MN
Mizuki N
MS
MacGregor S
VV
Vitart V
AT
Aung T
SS
Saw SM
TE
Tai ES
WT
Wong TY
CC
Cheng CY
BP
Baird PN
YR
Yamada R
MF
Matsuda F
YN
Yoshimura N
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Myopia can cause severe visual impairment. Here, we report a two-stage genome-wide association study for three myopia-related traits in 9,804 Japanese individuals, which was extended with trans-ethnic replication in 2,674 Chinese and 2,690 Caucasian individuals. We identify WNT7B as a novel susceptibility gene for axial length (rs10453441, Pmeta=3.9 × 10(-13)) and corneal curvature (Pmeta=2.9 × 10(-40)) and confirm the previously reported association between GJD2 and myopia. WNT7B significantly associates with extreme myopia in a case-control study with 1,478 Asian patients and 4,689 controls (odds ratio (OR)meta=1.13, Pmeta=0.011). We also find in a mouse model of myopia downregulation of WNT7B expression in the cornea and upregulation in the retina, suggesting its possible role in the development of myopia.

Up to 3,248 Japanese ancestry individuals

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

6708
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
Yes
Replicated
3,460 Japanese ancestry individuals
Replication Participants
East Asian, European
Ancestry
Japan, Australia, U.K., Croatia, Singapore, China, Hong Kong SAR
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of health and genetic findings

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