Author:
Granot-Hershkovitz Einat,Xia Rui,Yang Yunju,Spitzer Brian,Tarraf Wassim,Vásquez Priscilla M.,Lipton Richard B.,Daviglus Martha,Argos Maria,Cai Jianwen,Kaplan Robert,Fornage Myriam,DeCarli Charles,Gonzalez Hector M.,Sofer Tamar
Abstract
AbstractAPOE-ɛ4 risk on Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) and Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) differs between race/ethnic groups, presumably due to ancestral genomic background surrounding the APOE locus. We studied whether African and Amerindian ancestry-enriched genetic variants in the APOE region modify the effect of the APOE-ɛ4 alleles on Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) in Hispanics/Latinos. We defined African and Amerindian ancestry-enriched variants as those common in one Hispanic/Latino parental ancestry and rare in the other two. We identified such variants in the APOE region with a predicted moderate impact based on the SnpEff tool. We tested their interaction with APOE-ɛ4 on MCI in the Study of Latinos-Investigation of Neurocognitive Aging (SOL-INCA) population and African Americans from the Atherosclerosis Risk In Communities (ARIC) study. We identified 5 Amerindian and 14 African enriched variants with an expected moderate effect. A suggestive significant interaction (p-value = 0.01) was found for one African-enriched variant, rs8112679, located in the ZNF222 gene fourth exon. Our results suggest there are no ancestry-enriched variants with large effect sizes of interaction effects with APOE-ɛ4 on MCI in the APOE region in the Hispanic/Latino population. Further studies are needed in larger datasets to identify potential interactions with smaller effect sizes.
Funder
National Institute on Aging
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
3 articles.
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