학술논문

Gene Expression Imputation Across Multiple Tissue Types Provides Insight Into the Genetic Architecture of Frontotemporal Dementia and Its Clinical Subtypes
Document Type
article
Author
Reus, Lianne MPasaniuc, BogdanPosthuma, DanielleBoltz, ToniConsortium, International FTD-GenomicsFerrari, RaffaeleHernandez, Dena GNalls, Michael ARohrer, Jonathan DRamasamy, AdaikalavanKwok, John BJDobson-Stone, CarolBrooks, William SSchofield, Peter RHalliday, Glenda MHodges, John RPiguet, OlivierBartley, LaurenThompson, ElizabethHernández, IsabelRuiz, AgustínBoada, MercèBorroni, BarbaraPadovani, AlessandroCruchaga, CarlosCairns, Nigel JBenussi, LuisaBinetti, GiulianoGhidoni, RobertaForloni, GianluigiGalimberti, DanielaFenoglio, ChiaraSerpente, MariaScarpini, ElioClarimón, JordiLleó, AlbertoBlesa, RafaelWaldö, Maria LandqvistNilsson, KarinNilsson, ChristerMackenzie, Ian RAHsiung, Ging-Yuek RMann, David MAGrafman, JordanMorris, Christopher MAttems, JohannesGriffiths, Timothy DMcKeith, Ian GThomas, Alan JPietrini, PietroHuey, Edward DWassermann, Eric MBaborie, AtikJaros, EvelynTierney, Michael CPastor, PauRazquin, CristinaOrtega-Cubero, SaraAlonso, ElenaPerneczky, RobertDiehl-Schmid, JanineAlexopoulos, PanagiotisKurz, AlexanderRainero, InnocenzoRubino, ElisaPinessi, LorenzoRogaeva, EkaterinaSt. George-Hyslop, PeterRossi, GiacominaTagliavini, FabrizioGiaccone, GiorgioRowe, James BSchlachetzki, Johannes CMUphill, JamesCollinge, JohnMead, SimonDanek, AdrianVan Deerlin, Vivianna MGrossman, MurrayTrojanowski, John Qvan der Zee, JulieVan Broeckhoven, ChristineCappa, Stefano FLe Ber, IsabelleHannequin, DidierGolfier, VéroniqueVercelletto, MartineBrice, AlexisNacmias, BenedettaSorbi, SandroBagnoli, SilviaPiaceri, IreneNielsen, Jørgen EHjermind, Lena ERiemenschneider, MatthiasMayhaus, ManuelIbach, BerndGasparoni, GillesPichler, SabrinaGu, Wei
Source
Biological Psychiatry. 89(8)
Subject
Biological Sciences
Genetics
Acquired Cognitive Impairment
Frontotemporal Dementia (FTD)
Aging
Dementia
Neurodegenerative
Neurosciences
Alzheimer's Disease including Alzheimer's Disease Related Dementias (AD/ADRD)
Brain Disorders
Prevention
Alzheimer's Disease Related Dementias (ADRD)
Rare Diseases
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Neurological
Frontotemporal Dementia
Gene Expression
Humans
International FTD-Genomics Consortium
17q21.31 inversion region
Dorsolateral prefrontal cortex
Expression quantitative trait loci
Frontotemporal dementia
SEC22B
Transcriptome-wide association study
Medical and Health Sciences
Psychology and Cognitive Sciences
Psychiatry
Biological sciences
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Psychology
Language
Abstract
BackgroundThe etiology of frontotemporal dementia (FTD) is poorly understood. To identify genes with predicted expression levels associated with FTD, we integrated summary statistics with external reference gene expression data using a transcriptome-wide association study approach.MethodsFUSION software was used to leverage FTD summary statistics (all FTD: n = 2154 cases, n = 4308 controls; behavioral variant FTD: n = 1337 cases, n = 2754 controls; semantic dementia: n = 308 cases, n = 616 controls; progressive nonfluent aphasia: n = 269 cases, n = 538 controls; FTD with motor neuron disease: n = 200 cases, n = 400 controls) from the International FTD-Genomics Consortium with 53 expression quantitative loci tissue type panels (n = 12,205; 5 consortia). Significance was assessed using a 5% false discovery rate threshold.ResultsWe identified 73 significant gene-tissue associations for FTD, representing 44 unique genes in 34 tissue types. Most significant findings were derived from dorsolateral prefrontal cortex splicing data (n = 19 genes, 26%). The 17q21.31 inversion locus contained 23 significant associations, representing 6 unique genes. Other top hits included SEC22B (a gene involved in vesicle trafficking), TRGV5, and ZNF302. A single gene finding (RAB38) was observed for behavioral variant FTD. For other clinical subtypes, no significant associations were observed.ConclusionsWe identified novel candidate genes (e.g., SEC22B) and previously reported risk regions (e.g., 17q21.31) for FTD. Most significant associations were observed in dorsolateral prefrontal cortex splicing data despite the modest sample size of this reference panel. This suggests that our findings are specific to FTD and are likely to be biologically relevant highlights of genes at different FTD risk loci that are contributing to the disease pathology.