Li Jiayong, Ma Xin, Zhuo Kaichen, He Yuxian, Lin Mingkai, Wang Wei, Guo Shicheng, Tang Chao, Zhang Xu, Gao Xinbo
State Key Laboratory of Ophthalmology, Zhongshan Ophthalmic Center, Sun Yat-sen University, Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Ophthalmology and Vision Science, Guangdong Provincial Clinical Research Center for Ocular Diseases, Guangzhou, China.
Department of Ophthalmology, The First People's Hospital of Kashi Prefecture (The Affiliated Kashi Hospital of Sun Yat-Sen University), Kashi, China.
Clin Exp Ophthalmol. 2024 Dec;52(9):945-956. doi: 10.1111/ceo.14440. Epub 2024 Sep 26.
Glaucoma is the most common cause of irreversible blindness, and gut microbiota (GM) is associated with glaucoma. Whether this association represents a causal role remains unknown. This study aims to assess the potential association and causal link between GM and various forms of glaucoma, emphasising the need for cautious interpretation of the strength of these associations.
Employing a two-sample bidirectional Mendelian randomisation (MR) framework with false discovery rate correction and various sensitivity analyses, supplemented by genetic correlation analysis via linkage disequilibrium score regression (LDSC) and colocalisation for European summary-level data between MiBioGen consortium and FinnGen Study, we sought to explore the relationship between GM and glaucoma.
While certain microbial taxa showed potential associations with glaucoma subtypes (e.g., Erysipelotrichaceae with primary angle closure glaucoma, Senegalimassilia with exfoliation glaucoma), the overall findings suggest a complex and not definitively causal relationship between GM and glaucoma. Notably, reverse MR analysis did not establish a significant causal effect of glaucoma on GM composition, and no consistent genetic correlations were observed between GM and glaucoma.
While our study provides some evidence of associations between specific GM taxa and glaucoma, the results underscore the complexity of these relationships and the need for further research to clarify the potential causal links. The findings highlight the importance of interpreting the gut-eye axis with caution and suggest that while GM may play a role in glaucoma, it is unlikely to be a predominant causal factor.
青光眼是不可逆失明的最常见原因,而肠道微生物群(GM)与青光眼有关。这种关联是否代表因果关系尚不清楚。本研究旨在评估GM与各种形式青光眼之间的潜在关联和因果联系,强调对这些关联强度进行谨慎解释的必要性。
采用具有错误发现率校正的两样本双向孟德尔随机化(MR)框架和各种敏感性分析,并通过连锁不平衡评分回归(LDSC)进行基因相关性分析以及对MiBioGen联盟和芬兰基因研究之间的欧洲汇总水平数据进行共定位分析,我们试图探索GM与青光眼之间的关系。
虽然某些微生物分类群显示出与青光眼亚型的潜在关联(例如,丹毒丝菌科与原发性闭角型青光眼、塞内加尔马西利亚菌与剥脱性青光眼),但总体研究结果表明GM与青光眼之间存在复杂且并非明确的因果关系。值得注意的是,反向MR分析未证实青光眼对GM组成有显著因果效应,并且在GM与青光眼之间未观察到一致的基因相关性。
虽然我们的研究提供了一些特定GM分类群与青光眼之间存在关联的证据,但结果强调了这些关系的复杂性以及需要进一步研究以阐明潜在因果联系。研究结果突出了谨慎解释肠眼轴的重要性,并表明虽然GM可能在青光眼中起作用,但不太可能是主要的因果因素。