Clearing up blurry vision: scientists gaze toward causes of myopia.Next time you can't make out a distant highway sign, blame your parents. Scientists in the United Kingdom have found that myopia myopia: see nearsightedness. , or nearsightedness nearsightedness or myopia, defect of vision in which far objects appear blurred but near objects are seen clearly. Because the eyeball is too long or the refractive power of the eye's lens is too strong, the image is focused in front of the , is predominantly hereditary, and they're beginning to unravel the genetic mechanism that causes the vision problem. Roughly a third of people in the United States suffer from myopia--They clearly see close objects, such as words in a book, but things in the distance appear blurry. The anatomic root of the problem is an elongation of the eye as it grows, causing incoming light to focus in front of the retina, instead of squarely on it, explains Christopher J. Hammond of St. Thomas' Hospital in London. Using a noninvasive technique, Hammond measured the sizes of the eyeballs of 280 sets of fraternal adult twins and 226 sets of identical twins identical twins pl.n. Twins derived from the same fertilized ovum that at an early stage of development becomes separated into independently growing cell aggregations, giving rise to two individuals of the same sex, identical genetic makeup, and . By mathematically modeling the differences in the eye sizes, Hammond found that genes accounted for 89 percent of nearsightedness, farsightedness farsightedness or hyperopia, condition in which far objects can be seen easily but there is difficulty in near vision. It is caused by a defect of refraction in which the image is focused behind the retina of the eye rather than upon it, either , and other refractive refractive capacity to refract light. refractive error a difference between the focal length of the cornea and lens, and the length of the eye, resulting in myopia or hyperopia. vision problems, he reports in the July American Journal of Human Genetics The American Journal of Human Genetics is a leading journal in the field of human genetics. Since its inception in 1948 by the American Society for Human Genetics, the Journal has provided a record of research and review relating to heredity in humans and to the application . To investigate what regions of DNA DNA: see nucleic acid. DNA or deoxyribonucleic acid One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes. in the general population might have a connection to myopia, Hammond scanned the entire genome of the fraternal twins fraternal twins pl.n. Twins that derive from separately fertilized ova and that have different genetic makeup. They may be of the same or opposite sex. and found four sections linked to the eye problem. The most strongly linked segment contains 44 genes, including one specified as PAX6, which is already well-known to vision researchers. From fruit flies to humans, this gene is fundamental to eye growth in nearly all species that scientists have examined. "We didn't think PAX6 would be involved in myopia," says Hammond. "Usually mutations [in PAX6] cause major anomalies in the eye, like aniridia," a condition in which the eye lacks the iris. A closer genetic examination of the PAX6 portion didn't identify a specific variation that causes myopia. Hammond suggests two explanations. One possibility is that that an independent gene near PAX6, but outside the segment that the researchers examined most closely, plays a critical role in myopia. Another explanation could be that a source of myopia lies in a nearby gene that affects the activity of PAX6, speculates Hammond. "[Myopia] could be affected by several genes and the environment as well," says J. Fielding Hejtmancik of the National Eye Institute in Bethesda, Md. There's evidence that one major environmental contributor is close-up work. Researchers have observed that an increased literacy rate in a population is often followed by a dramatic rise in the rate of myopia, says Karla S. Zadnik of Ohio State University's College of Optometry optometry (ŏptŏm`ətrē), eye-care specialty concerned with eye examination, determination of visual abilities, diagnosis of eye diseases and conditions, and the prescription of lenses and other corrective measures. in Columbus. Do parents who became myopic because of heavy reading create an environment that encourages their kids to follow suit, she asks. Or do kids inherit a genetic propensity for myopia, and reading triggers it? If scientists can determine the genetic mechanisms for myopia, they might develop targeted pharmaceutical agents that can halt or slow the excessive eye growth that causes it. |
|
||||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion