Abstract
AbstractAlzheimer’s disease (AD) is the most common multifactorial neurodegenerative disease among elderly people. Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have been highly successful in identifying genetic risk factors. However, GWAS investigate common variants, which tend to have small effect sizes, and rare variants with potentially larger phenotypic effects have not been sufficiently investigated. Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) enables us to detect those rare variants. Here, we performed rare-variant association studies by using WGS data from 140 individuals with probable AD and 798 cognitively normal elder controls (CN), as well as single-nucleotide polymorphism genotyping data from an independent large Japanese AD cohort of 1604 AD and 1235 CN subjects. We identified two rare variants as candidates for AD association: a missense variant inOR51G1(rs146006146, c.815 G > A, p.R272H) and a stop-gain variant inMLKL(rs763812068, c.142 C > T, p.Q48X). Subsequent in vitro functional analysis revealed that theMLKLstop-gain variant can contribute to increases not only in abnormal cells that should die by programmed cell death but do not, but also in the ratio of Aβ42 to Aβ40. We further detected AD candidate genes through gene-based association tests of rare variants; a network-based meta-analysis using these candidates identified four functionally important hub genes (NCOR2,PLEC,DMD, andNEDD4). Our findings will contribute to the understanding of AD and provide novel insights into its pathogenic mechanisms that can be used in future studies.
Funder
The DAIKO Foundation. Research Funding for Longevity Sciences from the NCGG (Grant Number: 30-29).
Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development
Research Funding for Longevity Sciences from the NCGG (Grant Number: 29-45). A grant for Research on Dementia from the Japanese Ministry of Health, Labour, and Welfare.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Psychiatry and Mental health,Molecular Biology
Cited by
17 articles.
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