Genetic control of the alternative pathway of complement in humans and age-related macular degeneration

LA Hecker, AO Edwards, E Ryu… - Human molecular …, 2010 - academic.oup.com
LA Hecker, AO Edwards, E Ryu, N Tosakulwong, KH Baratz, WL Brown, PC Issa, HP Scholl
Human molecular genetics, 2010academic.oup.com
Activation of the alternative pathway of complement is implicated in common
neurodegenerative diseases including age-related macular degeneration (AMD). We
explored the impact of common variation in genes encoding proteins of the alternative
pathway on complement activation in human blood and in AMD. Genetic variation across the
genes encoding complement factor H (CFH), factor B (CFB) and component 3 (C3) was
determined. The influence of common haplotypes defining transcriptional and translational …
Abstract
Activation of the alternative pathway of complement is implicated in common neurodegenerative diseases including age-related macular degeneration (AMD). We explored the impact of common variation in genes encoding proteins of the alternative pathway on complement activation in human blood and in AMD. Genetic variation across the genes encoding complement factor H (CFH), factor B (CFB) and component 3 (C3) was determined. The influence of common haplotypes defining transcriptional and translational units on complement activation in blood was determined in a quantitative genomic association study. Individual haplotypes in CFH and CFB were associated with distinct and novel effects on plasma levels of precursors, regulators and activation products of the alternative pathway of complement in human blood. Further, genetic variation in CFH thought to influence cell surface regulation of complement did not alter plasma complement levels in human blood. Plasma markers of chronic activation (split-products Ba and C3d) and an activating enzyme (factor D) were elevated in AMD subjects. Most of the elevation in AMD was accounted for by the genetic variation controlling complement activation in human blood. Activation of the alternative pathway of complement in blood is under genetic control and increases with age. The genetic variation associated with increased activation of complement in human blood also increased the risk of AMD. Our data are consistent with a disease model in which genetic variation in the complement system increases the risk of AMD by a combination of systemic complement activation and abnormal regulation of complement activation in local tissues.
Oxford University Press