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Dive into the research topics where Lisa S. Kearns is active.

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Featured researches published by Lisa S. Kearns.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2010

Mutations in TSPAN12 cause autosomal-dominant familial exudative vitreoretinopathy.

James A. Poulter; Manir Ali; David F. Gilmour; Aine Rice; Hiroyuki Kondo; Kenshi Hayashi; David A. Mackey; Lisa S. Kearns; Jonathan B Ruddle; Jamie E. Craig; Eric A. Pierce; Louise Downey; Moin D. Mohamed; Alexander F. Markham; Chris F. Inglehearn; Carmel Toomes

Familial exudative vitreoretinopathy (FEVR) is an inherited blinding disorder of the retinal vascular system. Although mutations in three genes (LRP5, FZD4, and NDP) are known to cause FEVR, these account for only a fraction of FEVR cases. The proteins encoded by these FEVR genes form part of a signaling complex that activates the Norrin-beta-catenin signaling pathway. Recently, through a large-scale reverse genetic screen in mice, Junge and colleagues identified an additional member of this signaling complex, Tspan12. Here, we report that mutations in TSPAN12 also cause autosomal-dominant FEVR. We describe seven mutations identified in a cohort of 70 FEVR patients in whom we had already excluded the known FEVR genes. This study provides further evidence for the importance of the Norrin-beta-catenin signaling pathway in the development of the retinal vasculature and also indicates that more FEVR genes remain to be identified.


Nature Genetics | 2014

Genome-wide analysis of multi-ancestry cohorts identifies new loci influencing intraocular pressure and susceptibility to glaucoma

Pirro G. Hysi; Ching-Yu Cheng; Henriet Springelkamp; Stuart MacGregor; Jessica N. Cooke Bailey; Robert Wojciechowski; Veronique Vitart; Abhishek Nag; Alex W. Hewitt; René Höhn; Cristina Venturini; Alireza Mirshahi; Wishal D. Ramdas; Gudmar Thorleifsson; Eranga N. Vithana; Chiea Chuen Khor; Arni B Stefansson; Jiemin Liao; Jonathan L. Haines; Najaf Amin; Ya Xing Wang; Philipp S. Wild; Ayse B Ozel; Jun Li; Brian W. Fleck; Tanja Zeller; Sandra E Staffieri; Yik-Ying Teo; Gabriel Cuellar-Partida; Xiaoyan Luo

Elevated intraocular pressure (IOP) is an important risk factor in developing glaucoma, and variability in IOP might herald glaucomatous development or progression. We report the results of a genome-wide association study meta-analysis of 18 population cohorts from the International Glaucoma Genetics Consortium (IGGC), comprising 35,296 multi-ancestry participants for IOP. We confirm genetic association of known loci for IOP and primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG) and identify four new IOP-associated loci located on chromosome 3q25.31 within the FNDC3B gene (P = 4.19 × 10−8 for rs6445055), two on chromosome 9 (P = 2.80 × 10−11 for rs2472493 near ABCA1 and P = 6.39 × 10−11 for rs8176693 within ABO) and one on chromosome 11p11.2 (best P = 1.04 × 10−11 for rs747782). Separate meta-analyses of 4 independent POAG cohorts, totaling 4,284 cases and 95,560 controls, showed that 3 of these loci for IOP were also associated with POAG.


British Journal of Ophthalmology | 2008

The natural history of OPA1-related autosomal dominant optic atrophy

Amy C. Cohn; Carmel Toomes; Alex W. Hewitt; Lisa S. Kearns; Chris F. Inglehearn; Jamie E. Craig; David A. Mackey

Background/aims: Autosomal dominant optic atrophy (ADOA) is a genetically heterogenous disease. However, a large proportion of this disease is accounted for by mutations in OPA1. The aim of this longitudinal study was to investigate disease progression in Australian ADOA patients with confirmed OPA1 mutations. Methods: Probands with characteristic clinical findings of ADOA were screened for OPA1 mutations, and relatives of identified mutation carriers were invited to participate. Disease progression was determined by sequential examination or using historical records over a mean of 9.6 (range 1–42) years. Results: OPA1 mutation carriers (n = 158) were identified in 11 ADOA pedigrees. Sixty-nine mutation carriers were available for longitudinal follow-up. Using the right eye as the default, best-corrected visual acuity (BCVAR) remained unchanged (defined as visual acuity at or within one line of original measurement) in 43 patients (62%). BCVAR worsened by 2 lines in 13 patients (19%). BCVAR deteriorated by more than 2 lines in six patients (9%). Ten per cent of patients had an improvement in visual acuity. Mean time to follow-up was 9.6 years with the mean visual acuity being 6/18 for both the initial and subsequent measurements. There was no statistical significance in the rate of BCVAR loss across different OPA1 mutations (p = 0.55). Conclusion: OPA1-related ADOA generally progresses slowly and functional visual acuity is usually maintained. Longitudinal disease studies are important to enable appropriate counselling of patients. This study enables a better understanding of the natural history of ADOA.


Ophthalmic Genetics | 2007

PAX6 mutations may be associated with high myopia

Alex W. Hewitt; Lisa S. Kearns; Robyn V. Jamieson; Kathy Williamson; Veronica van Heyningen; David A. Mackey

PAX6 is a key regulator of eye development and there are many well recognized ophthalmic sequelae of mutations at this locus. The 14 exon PAX6 gene is well conserved across species and phyla. Coding region mutations manifest in a variety of phenotypes. Predicted premature protein truncations are generally associated with classical aniridia. Missense mutations are often found in cases with variant phenotypes such as ectopia pupillae; isolated foveal hypoplasia; nystagmus and hyaloid vessel proliferation. The locus has also been implicated, through a genome-wide sib-pair scan, to be important in the normal variation of myopia. We investigated the association between identified PAX6 mutations and refractive error in Australian patients from four pedigrees. Two of eight subjects with a 1410delC PAX6 mutation had a mean spherical equivalence < −9D, whilst a mean spherical equivalence ≤ −5D was recorded in two from four subjects with an Arg240Stop PAX6 mutation and one of two subjects with a Glu93Stop mutation. One individual identified with a Pro346Ala PAX6 mutation had a mean spherical equivalence of +2.8 D. Thus, our observations generally support other incidental findings, that PAX6 mutation, particularly predicted haploinsufficiency, may be associated with extreme refractive error, although the mechanism by which this occurs is not clear.


Clinical and Experimental Ophthalmology | 2007

How significant is a family history of glaucoma? Experience from the Glaucoma Inheritance Study in Tasmania

Catherine M Green; Lisa S. Kearns; Johnny Wu; Julie M. Barbour; Robyn M Wilkinson; Maree A. Ring; Jamie E. Craig; Tl Wong; Alex W. Hewitt; David A. Mackey

Purpose:  To determine what proportion of primary open angle glaucoma (POAG) in Tasmania, Australia is familial.


Hypertension | 2009

Effect of Birth Parameters on Retinal Vascular Caliber The Twins Eye Study in Tasmania

Cong Sun; Anne-Louise Ponsonby; Tien Yin Wong; Shayne A. Brown; Lisa S. Kearns; Jenny Cochrane; Jane R. MacKinnon; Jonathan B Ruddle; Alex W. Hewitt; Gerald Liew; Terence Dwyer; Katrina J. Scurrah; David A. Mackey

Recent studies reported an association between smaller birth size and narrower retinal vascular caliber, but it remains unclear whether this association is attributed to confounding by shared environment or genetic factors. At a mean age of 9.3 years, 266 twins (49 monozygotic and 84 dizygotic pairs) in the Twins Eye Study in Tasmania underwent an ophthalmic examination including retinal photography. Retinal vascular caliber was measured using a validated protocol. The majority of these twins were also in the Tasmanian Infant Health Study, which prospectively collected data on birth parameters and antenatal maternal factors. We conducted the main analysis using linear mixed models, accounting for birth set clustering. Both the within-pair (−9.73; 95% CI: −14.68 to −4.77 &mgr;m per 5-cm decrease in birth length) and between-pair associations (−7.15; 95% CI: −11.54 to −3.01) with retinal arteriolar caliber were significant and of similar magnitude (difference in effect, P=0.61), after adjusting for age, sex, maternal smoking, mean arterial blood pressure, and other confounders. These associations remained within dizygotic and monozygotic pairs. Analyses of head circumference and retinal arteriolar caliber were similar to those of birth length (within-pair regression coefficient: −2.41; 95% CI: −5.09 to 0.28; between-pair regression coefficient: −2.60; 95% CI: −5.00 to −0.19). For birth weight, only a between-pair association was evident (−7.28; 95% CI: −13.07 to −1.48). This study demonstrates a consistent association between smaller birth size and narrower retinal arterioles in twins. The independent effect of shorter birth length on retinal arteriolar caliber supports a role for twin-specific supply line factors affecting fetal growth on vascular structure.


Twin Research and Human Genetics | 2009

Twins Eye Study in Tasmania (TEST): Rationale and Methodology to Recruit and Examine Twins

David A. Mackey; Jane R. MacKinnon; Shayne A. Brown; Lisa S. Kearns; Jonathan B Ruddle; Paul G. Sanfilippo; Cong Sun; Christopher J. Hammond; Terri L. Young; Nicholas G. Martin; Alex W. Hewitt

Visual impairment is a leading cause of morbidity and poor quality of life in our community. Unravelling the mechanisms underpinning important blinding diseases could allow preventative or curative steps to be implemented. Twin siblings provide a unique opportunity in biology to discover genes associated with numerous eye diseases and ocular biometry. Twins are particularly useful for quantitative trait analysis through genome-wide association and linkage studies. Although many studies involving twins rely on twin registries, we present our approach to the Twins Eye Study in Tasmania to provide insight into possible recruitment strategies, expected participation rates and potential examination strategies that can be considered by other researchers for similar studies. Five separate avenues for cohort recruitment were adopted: (1) piggy-backing existing studies where twins had been recruited, (2) utilizing the national twin registry, (3) word-of-mouth and local media publicity, (4) directly approaching schools, and finally (5) collaborating with other research groups studying twins.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation compensation may preserve vision in patients with OPA1-linked autosomal dominant optic atrophy

Nicole J. Van Bergen; Jonathan G. Crowston; Lisa S. Kearns; Sandra E Staffieri; Alex W. Hewitt; Amy C. Cohn; David A. Mackey; Ian A. Trounce

Autosomal Dominant Optic Atrophy (ADOA) is the most common inherited optic atrophy where vision impairment results from specific loss of retinal ganglion cells of the optic nerve. Around 60% of ADOA cases are linked to mutations in the OPA1 gene. OPA1 is a fission-fusion protein involved in mitochondrial inner membrane remodelling. ADOA presents with marked variation in clinical phenotype and varying degrees of vision loss, even among siblings carrying identical mutations in OPA1. To determine whether the degree of vision loss is associated with the level of mitochondrial impairment, we examined mitochondrial function in lymphoblast cell lines obtained from six large Australian OPA1-linked ADOA pedigrees. Comparing patients with severe vision loss (visual acuity [VA]<6/36) and patients with relatively preserved vision (VA>6/9) a clear defect in mitochondrial ATP synthesis and reduced respiration rates were observed in patients with poor vision. In addition, oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) enzymology in ADOA patients with normal vision revealed increased complex II+III activity and levels of complex IV protein. These data suggest that OPA1 deficiency impairs OXPHOS efficiency, but compensation through increases in the distal complexes of the respiratory chain may preserve mitochondrial ATP production in patients who maintain normal vision. Identification of genetic variants that enable this response may provide novel therapeutic insights into OXPHOS compensation for preventing vision loss in optic neuropathies.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Measurement of systemic mitochondrial function in advanced Primary Open-Angle Glaucoma and leber hereditary optic neuropathy

Nicole J. Van Bergen; Jonathan G. Crowston; Jamie E. Craig; Kathryn P. Burdon; Lisa S. Kearns; Shiwani Sharma; Alex W. Hewitt; David A. Mackey; Ian A. Trounce

Primary Open Angle Glaucoma (POAG) is a common neurodegenerative disease characterized by the selective and gradual loss of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs). Aging and increased intraocular pressure (IOP) are glaucoma risk factors; nevertheless patients deteriorate at all levels of IOP, implying other causative factors. Recent evidence presents mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) complex-I impairments in POAG. Leber Hereditary Optic Neuropathy (LHON) patients suffer specific and rapid loss of RGCs, predominantly in young adult males, due to complex-I mutations in the mitochondrial genome. This study directly compares the degree of OXPHOS impairment in POAG and LHON patients, testing the hypothesis that the milder clinical disease in POAG is due to a milder complex-I impairment. To assess overall mitochondrial capacity, cells can be forced to produce ATP primarily from mitochondrial OXPHOS by switching the media carbon source to galactose. Under these conditions POAG lymphoblasts grew 1.47 times slower than controls, whilst LHON lymphoblasts demonstrated a greater degree of growth impairment (2.35 times slower). Complex-I enzyme specific activity was reduced by 18% in POAG lymphoblasts and by 29% in LHON lymphoblasts. We also assessed complex-I ATP synthesis, which was 19% decreased in POAG patients and 17% decreased in LHON patients. This study demonstrates both POAG and LHON lymphoblasts have impaired complex-I, and in the majority of aspects the functional defects in POAG were milder than LHON, which could reflect the milder disease development of POAG. This new evidence places POAG in the spectrum of mitochondrial optic neuropathies and raises the possibility for new therapeutic targets aimed at improving mitochondrial function.


Genetic Epidemiology | 2015

Meta-analysis of Genome-Wide Association Studies Identifies Novel Loci Associated With Optic Disc Morphology

Henriet Springelkamp; Aniket Mishra; Pirro G. Hysi; Puya Gharahkhani; René Höhn; Chiea Chuen Khor; Jessica N. Cooke Bailey; Xiaoyan Luo; Wishal D. Ramdas; Eranga N. Vithana; Seyhan Yazar; Liang Xu; Hannah Forward; Lisa S. Kearns; Najaf Amin; Adriana I. Iglesias; Kar Seng Sim; Elisabeth M. van Leeuwen; Ayse Demirkan; Sven J. van der Lee; Seng Chee Loon; Fernando Rivadeneira; Abhishek Nag; Paul G. Sanfilippo; Arne Schillert; Paulus T. V. M. de Jong; Ben A. Oostra; André G. Uitterlinden; Albert Hofman; Tiger Zhou

Primary open‐angle glaucoma is the most common optic neuropathy and an important cause of irreversible blindness worldwide. The optic nerve head or optic disc is divided in two parts: a central cup (without nerve fibers) surrounded by the neuroretinal rim (containing axons of the retinal ganglion cells). The International Glaucoma Genetics Consortium conducted a meta‐analysis of genome‐wide association studies consisting of 17,248 individuals of European ancestry and 6,841 individuals of Asian ancestry. The outcomes of the genome‐wide association studies were disc area and cup area. These specific measurements describe optic nerve morphology in another way than the vertical cup‐disc ratio, which is a clinically used measurement, and may shed light on new glaucoma mechanisms. We identified 10 new loci associated with disc area (CDC42BPA, F5, DIRC3, RARB, ABI3BP, DCAF4L2, ELP4, TMTC2, NR2F2, and HORMAD2) and another 10 new loci associated with cup area (DHRS3, TRIB2, EFEMP1, FLNB, FAM101, DDHD1, ASB7, KPNB1, BCAS3, and TRIOBP). The new genes participate in a number of pathways and future work is likely to identify more functions related to the pathogenesis of glaucoma.

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David A. Mackey

University of Western Australia

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Lyn R. Griffiths

Queensland University of Technology

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Nicholas G. Martin

QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute

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Jane R. MacKinnon

Royal Hospital for Sick Children

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