학술논문

Novel late-onset Alzheimer disease loci variants associate with brain gene expression.
Document Type
article
Author
Allen, MarietZou, FanggengChai, High SengYounkin, Curtis SCrook, JuliaPankratz, V ShaneCarrasquillo, Minerva MRowley, Christopher NNair, Asha AMiddha, SumitMaharjan, SoorajNguyen, ThuyMa, LiMalphrus, Kimberly GPalusak, RyanLincoln, SarahBisceglio, GinaGeorgescu, ConstantinSchultz, DebraRakhshan, FariborzKolbert, Christopher PJen, JinHaines, Jonathan LMayeux, RichardPericak-Vance, Margaret AFarrer, Lindsay ASchellenberg, Gerard DPetersen, Ronald CGraff-Radford, Neill RDickson, Dennis WYounkin, Steven GErtekin-Taner, NilüferAlzheimer's Disease Genetics Consortium (ADGC)Apostolova, Liana GArnold, Steven EBaldwin, Clinton TBarber, RobertBarmada, Michael MBeach, ThomasBeecham, Gary WBeekly, DuaneBennett, David ABigio, Eileen HBird, Thomas DBlacker, DeborahBoeve, Bradley FBowen, James DBoxer, AdamBurke, James RBuros, JacquelineBuxbaum, Joseph DCairns, Nigel JCantwell, Laura BCao, ChuanhaiCarlson, Chris SCarney, Regina MCarroll, Steven LChui, Helena CClark, David GCorneveaux, JasonCotman, Carl WCrane, Paul KCruchaga, CarlosCummings, Jeffrey LDe Jager, Philip LDeCarli, CharlesDeKosky, Steven TDemirci, F YesimDiaz-Arrastia, RamonDick, MalcolmDombroski, Beth ADuara, RanjanEllis, William DEvans, DenisFaber, Kelley MFallon, Kenneth BFarlow, Martin RFerris, StevenForoud, Tatiana MFrosch, MatthewGalasko, Douglas RGallins, Paul JGanguli, MaryGearing, MarlaGeschwind, Daniel HGhetti, BernardinoGilbert, John RGilman, SidGiordani, BrunoGlass, Jonathan DGoate, Alison MGreen, Robert CGrowdon, John HHakonarson, HakonHamilton, Ronald LHardy, JohnHarrell, Lindy EHead, ElizabethHonig, Lawrence SHuentelman, Matthew J
Source
Neurology. 79(3)
Subject
Alzheimer's Disease Genetics Consortium
Temporal Lobe
Humans
Alzheimer Disease
Genetic Predisposition to Disease
RNA
Autopsy
Linear Models
Risk Factors
Gene Expression
Brain Chemistry
Genotype
Gene Dosage
Polymorphism
Single Nucleotide
Alleles
Aged
Female
Male
Apolipoprotein E4
Clinical Research
Alzheimer's Disease
Aging
Acquired Cognitive Impairment
Human Genome
Neurosciences
Dementia
Neurodegenerative
Genetics
Brain Disorders
Alzheimer's Disease including Alzheimer's Disease Related Dementias (AD/ADRD)
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Neurological
Clinical Sciences
Cognitive Sciences
Neurology & Neurosurgery
Language
Abstract
ObjectiveRecent genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of late-onset Alzheimer disease (LOAD) identified 9 novel risk loci. Discovery of functional variants within genes at these loci is required to confirm their role in Alzheimer disease (AD). Single nucleotide polymorphisms that influence gene expression (eSNPs) constitute an important class of functional variants. We therefore investigated the influence of the novel LOAD risk loci on human brain gene expression.MethodsWe measured gene expression levels in the cerebellum and temporal cortex of autopsied AD subjects and those with other brain pathologies (∼400 total subjects). To determine whether any of the novel LOAD risk variants are eSNPs, we tested their cis-association with expression of 6 nearby LOAD candidate genes detectable in human brain (ABCA7, BIN1, CLU, MS4A4A, MS4A6A, PICALM) and an additional 13 genes ±100 kb of these SNPs. To identify additional eSNPs that influence brain gene expression levels of the novel candidate LOAD genes, we identified SNPs ±100 kb of their location and tested for cis-associations.ResultsCLU rs11136000 (p = 7.81 × 10(-4)) and MS4A4A rs2304933/rs2304935 (p = 1.48 × 10(-4)-1.86 × 10(-4)) significantly influence temporal cortex expression levels of these genes. The LOAD-protective CLU and risky MS4A4A locus alleles associate with higher brain levels of these genes. There are other cis-variants that significantly influence brain expression of CLU and ABCA7 (p = 4.01 × 10(-5)-9.09 × 10(-9)), some of which also associate with AD risk (p = 2.64 × 10(-2)-6.25 × 10(-5)).ConclusionsCLU and MS4A4A eSNPs may at least partly explain the LOAD risk association at these loci. CLU and ABCA7 may harbor additional strong eSNPs. These results have implications in the search for functional variants at the novel LOAD risk loci.