assessment of the association of matrix metalloproteinases with myopia, refractive error and ocular biometric measures in an australian cohort评估协会的基质金属蛋白酶与近视,屈光不正及眼生物措施在一个澳大利亚的队列.pdf
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Assessment of the Association of Matrix
Metalloproteinases with Myopia, Refractive Error and
Ocular Biometric Measures in an Australian Cohort
Maria Schache*, Paul N. Baird
Centre for Eye Research Australia, University of Melbourne, Royal Victorian Eye and Ear Hospital, Melbourne, Australia
Abstract
Extracellular matrix proteins have been implicated in protein remodelling of the sclera in refractive error. The matrix
metalloproteinases (MMPs) falling into the collagenase (MMP1, MMP8, MMP13), gelatinase (MMP2, MMP9) and stromelysin
(MMP3, MMP10, MMP11) functional groups are particularly important. We wished to assess their association with myopia,
refractive error and ocular biometric measures in an Australian cohort. A total of 543 unrelated individuals of Caucasian
ethnicity were genotyped including 269 myopes (#21.0D) and 274 controls (.21.0D). Tag single nucleotide
polymorphisms (SNPs) (n = 53) were chosen to encompass these eight MMPs. Association tests were performed using
linear and logistic regression analysis with age and gender as covariates. Spherical equivalent, myopia, axial length, anterior
chamber depth and corneal curvature were the phenotypes of interest. Initial findings indicated that the best p values for
each trait were 0.02 for myopia at rs2274755 (MMP9), 0.02 for SE at both rs3740938 (MMP8) and rs131451 (MMP11), 0.01 for
axial length at r (MMP8), 0.01 for anterior chamber depth at rs498186 (MMP1) and 0.02 at rs10488 (MMP1).
However, following correction for multiple testing, none of these SNPs remained statistically significant. Our data suggests
that the MMPs in the collagenase, gelatinase and stromelysin categories do not appear to be associated with myopia,
refractive error or ocular biometric measures in this cohort.
Citation: Scha
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