학술논문

Multi-ancestry GWAS reveals excitotoxicity associated with outcome after ischaemic stroke.
Document Type
article
Author
Ibanez, LauraHeitsch, LauraCarrera, CatyFarias, Fabiana HGDel Aguila, Jorge LDhar, RajatBudde, JohnBergmann, KristyBradley, JosephHarari, OscarPhuah, Chia LingLemmens, RobinViana Oliveira Souza, Alessandro AMoniche, FranciscoCabezas-Juan, AntonioArenillas, Juan FranciscoKrupinksi, JerzyCullell, NataliaTorres-Aguila, NuriaMuiño, ElenaCárcel-Márquez, JaraMarti-Fabregas, JoanDelgado-Mederos, RaquelMarin-Bueno, RebecaHornick, AlejandroVives-Bauza, CristofolNavarro, Rosa DiazTur, SilviaJimenez, CarmenObach, VictorSegura, TomasSerrano-Heras, GemmaChung, Jong WonRoquer, JaumeSoriano-Tarraga, CarolGiralt-Steinhauer, EvaMola-Caminal, MarinaPera, JoannaLapicka-Bodzioch, KatarzynaDerbisz, JustynaDavalos, AntoniLopez-Cancio, ElenaMuñoz, LuciaTatlisumak, TurgutMolina, CarlosRibo, MarcBustamante, AlejandroSobrino, TomasCastillo-Sanchez, JoseCampos, FranciscoRodriguez-Castro, EmilioArias-Rivas, SusanaRodríguez-Yáñez, ManuelHerbosa, ChristinaFord, Andria LGutierrez-Romero, AlonsoUribe-Pacheco, RodrigoArauz, AntonioLopes-Cendes, IsciaLowenkopf, TheodoreBarboza, Miguel AAmini, HajarStamova, BoryanaAnder, Bradley PSharp, Frank RKim, Gyeong MoonBang, Oh YoungJimenez-Conde, JordiSlowik, AgnieszkaStribian, DanielTsai, Ellen ABurkly, Linda CMontaner, JoanFernandez-Cadenas, IsraelLee, Jin MooCruchaga, Carlos
Source
Brain. 145(7)
Subject
Epidemiology
Health Sciences
Biotechnology
Human Genome
Stroke
Brain Disorders
Neurosciences
Genetics
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Aetiology
Neurological
Bayes Theorem
Brain Ischemia
Genome-Wide Association Study
Humans
Ischemic Stroke
United States
ischaemic stroke
neuroprotection
genetics
NIHSS
Medical and Health Sciences
Psychology and Cognitive Sciences
Neurology & Neurosurgery
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Health sciences
Psychology
Language
Abstract
During the first hours after stroke onset, neurological deficits can be highly unstable: some patients rapidly improve, while others deteriorate. This early neurological instability has a major impact on long-term outcome. Here, we aimed to determine the genetic architecture of early neurological instability measured by the difference between the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) within 6 h of stroke onset and NIHSS at 24 h. A total of 5876 individuals from seven countries (Spain, Finland, Poland, USA, Costa Rica, Mexico and Korea) were studied using a multi-ancestry meta-analyses. We found that 8.7% of NIHSS at 24 h of variance was explained by common genetic variations, and also that early neurological instability has a different genetic architecture from that of stroke risk. Eight loci (1p21.1, 1q42.2, 2p25.1, 2q31.2, 2q33.3, 5q33.2, 7p21.2 and 13q31.1) were genome-wide significant and explained 1.8% of the variability suggesting that additional variants influence early change in neurological deficits. We used functional genomics and bioinformatic annotation to identify the genes driving the association from each locus. Expression quantitative trait loci mapping and summary data-based Mendelian randomization indicate that ADAM23 (log Bayes factor = 5.41) was driving the association for 2q33.3. Gene-based analyses suggested that GRIA1 (log Bayes factor = 5.19), which is predominantly expressed in the brain, is the gene driving the association for the 5q33.2 locus. These analyses also nominated GNPAT (log Bayes factor = 7.64) ABCB5 (log Bayes factor = 5.97) for the 1p21.1 and 7p21.1 loci. Human brain single-nuclei RNA-sequencing indicates that the gene expression of ADAM23 and GRIA1 is enriched in neurons. ADAM23, a presynaptic protein and GRIA1, a protein subunit of the AMPA receptor, are part of a synaptic protein complex that modulates neuronal excitability. These data provide the first genetic evidence in humans that excitotoxicity may contribute to early neurological instability after acute ischaemic stroke.