Iran Daily

Trigger for most common form of vision loss discovered

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In a major step forward in the battle against macular degenerati­on, the leading cause of vision loss among the elderly, researcher­s at the University of Virginia School of Medicine have discovered a critical trigger for the damaging inàammatio­n that ultimately robs millions of their sight.

The ¿nding may allow doctors to halt the inàammatio­n early on, potentiall­y saving patients from blindness, sciencedai­ly.com reported.

Jayakrishn­a Ambati, MD, vice chairman for research of UVA’S Department of Ophthalmol­ogy and the founding director of UVA’S Center for Advanced Vision Science, said, “Almost 200 million people in the world have macular degenerati­on. If macular degenerati­on were a country, it would be the eighth most populated nation in the world. “That’s how large a problem this is. “For the ¿rst time, we know in macular degenerati­on what is one of the very ¿rst events that triggers the system to get alarmed and start, to use an anthropomo­rphic term, hyperventi­lating.

“This overdrive of inàammatio­n is what ultimately damages cells, and so, potentiall­y, we have a way of interferin­g very early in the process.”

New treatment for macular degenerati­on

Ambati and Nagaraj Kerur, PHD, assistant professor in the Department of Ophthalmol­ogy, and their laboratori­es have determined that the culprit is an enzyme called Cyclic GMP-AMP synthase (CGAS).

The enzyme plays an important role in the body’s immune response to infections by detecting foreign DNA.

But the molecule’s newly identi¿ed role in the ‘dry’ form of age-related macular degenerati­on comes as wholly unexpected.

Ambati said, “It’s really surprising that in macular degenerati­on, which, as far as we know, has nothing to do with viruses or bacteria, that CGAS is activated, and that this alarm system is turned on.

“This is what leads to the killing of the cells in the retina, and, ultimately, vision loss.”

The researcher­s noted that CGAS may be an alarm not just for pathogens but for other harmful problems that warrant responses from the immune system.

The enzyme may also play important roles in conditions such as diabetes, lupus and obesity, and researcher­s already are working to create drugs that could inhibit its function.

Kerur said, “Because the target we’re talking about is an enzyme, we could develop small molecules that could block it.

“There are many drugs already on the market that target speci¿c enzymes, such as the statins [which are used to lower cholestero­l levels.]”

The promising new lead comes as good news for researcher­s seeking to develop new treatments for dry macular degenerati­on, as clinical trials in recent years have come to dead end after dead end.

The UVA researcher­s expect the developmen­t of a drug to inhibit CGAS will take several years, and that drug would then need to go through extensive testing to determine its safety and effectiven­ess for combating macular degenerati­on.

The researcher­s also hope to develop a way to detect the levels of the enzyme in patients’ eyes.

That would let them determine when best to administer a treatment that blocks CGAS.

Ambati said, “If they have high levels of this enzyme in their eye, they might be a wonderful candidate for this sort of treatment.

“This is really precision medicine at the singlemole­cule level.”

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