Communications Biology (Jan 2024)

Genome-wide association identifies novel ROP risk loci in a multiethnic cohort

  • Xiaohui Li,
  • Leah A. Owen,
  • Kent D. Taylor,
  • Susan Ostmo,
  • Yii-Der Ida Chen,
  • Aaron S. Coyner,
  • Kemal Sonmez,
  • M. Elizabeth Hartnett,
  • Xiuqing Guo,
  • Eli Ipp,
  • Kathryn Roll,
  • Pauline Genter,
  • R. V. Paul Chan,
  • Margaret M. DeAngelis,
  • Michael F. Chiang,
  • J. Peter Campbell,
  • Jerome I. Rotter,
  • on behalf of the i-ROP Consortium

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-023-05743-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract We conducted a genome-wide association study (GWAS) in a multiethnic cohort of 920 at-risk infants for retinopathy of prematurity (ROP), a major cause of childhood blindness, identifying 1 locus at genome-wide significance level (p < 5×10-8) and 9 with significance of p < 5×10-6 for ROP ≥ stage 3. The most significant locus, rs2058019, reached genome-wide significance within the full multiethnic cohort (p = 4.96×10-9); Hispanic and European Ancestry infants driving the association. The lead single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) falls in an intronic region within the Glioma-associated oncogene family zinc finger 3 (GLI3) gene. Relevance for GLI3 and other top-associated genes to human ocular disease was substantiated through in-silico extension analyses, genetic risk score analysis and expression profiling in human donor eye tissues. Thus, we identify a novel locus at GLI3 with relevance to retinal biology, supporting genetic susceptibilities for ROP risk with possible variability by race and ethnicity.