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Cornea Gene Discovery Reveals Why
Humans See Clearly |
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A transparent cornea is essential
for vision, which is why the eye has evolved to nourish the
cornea without blood vessels. But for millions of people around
the world, diseases of the eye or trauma spur the growth of
blood vessels and can cause blindness.
A new Northwestern Medicine study has identified a gene that
plays a major role in maintaining clarity of the cornea in
humans and mice -- and could possibly be used as gene therapy to
treat diseases that cause blindness. The paper is published in
the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
"We believe we've discovered the master regulator gene that
prevents the formation of blood vessels in the eye and protects
the clarity of the cornea," said lead author Tsutomu Kume,
associate professor of medicine at Northwestern University
Feinberg School of Medicine and a researcher at Feinberg
Cardiovascular Research Institute.
The existence of the gene, FoxC1, was previously known, but its
role in maintaining a clear cornea is a new finding. Working
with a special breed of mice that are missing this gene, Kume
and colleagues found abnormal vascular formations, or blood
vessels, streaking their corneas and blocking light.
When Kume discovered the corneal blood vessels in the mutant
mice, he called a collaborator at the University of Alberta in
Canada, Ordan Lehmann, MD, professor of ophthalmology and
medical genetics.
Lehmann found that his patients who have a single copy of this
mutated FoxC1 gene -- and who have congenital glaucoma -- also
have abnormal blood vessel growth in their eyes.
"The exciting thing is by showing the loss of FoxC1 causes
vascularization of the cornea, it means increasing levels of the
gene might help prevent the abnormal growth of blood vessels,
potentially in multiple eye disorders that cause blindness,"
said Lehmann, a coauthor on the paper. "That's the hope." One
possible use might be in corneal transplants, he said, where the
growth of new blood vessels onto the transplanted cornea is a
major problem.
Kume next plans to test the gene therapy in mice to see if
injecting FoxC1 inhibits the formation of blood vessels in the
cornea.
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