Lysosomal polygenic risk is associated with the severity of neuropathology in Lewy body disease

Author:

Tunold Jon-Anders12,Tan Manuela M X1,Koga Shunsuke3ORCID,Geut Hanneke4,Rozemuller Annemieke J M456,Valentino Rebecca3,Sekiya Hiroaki3,Martin Nicholas B3,Heckman Michael G7,Bras Jose89,Guerreiro Rita89,Dickson Dennis W3ORCID,Toft Mathias12,van de Berg Wilma D J46,Ross Owen A3,Pihlstrøm Lasse1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology, Oslo University Hospital , 0424 Oslo , Norway

2. Institute of Clinical Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Oslo , 0372 Oslo , Norway

3. Department of Neuroscience, Mayo Clinic , Jacksonville, FL 32224 , USA

4. Department of Anatomy and Neurosciences, Amsterdam UMC, Vrije Universiteit , 1081 HV Amsterdam , The Netherlands

5. Department of Pathology, Amsterdam UMC, Vrije Universiteit , 1081 HV Amsterdam , The Netherlands

6. Program Neurodegeneration, Amsterdam Neuroscience , 1081 HV Amsterdam , The Netherlands

7. Division of Clinical Trials and Biostatistics, Mayo Clinic , Jacksonville, FL 32224 , USA

8. Department of Neurodegenerative Science, Van Andel Institute , Grand Rapids, MI 49503 , USA

9. Division of Psychiatry and Behavioral Medicine, Michigan State University College of Human Medicine , Grand Rapids, MI 49503 , USA

Abstract

AbstractIntraneuronal accumulation of misfolded α-synuclein is the pathological hallmark of Parkinson’s disease and dementia with Lewy bodies, often co-occurring with variable degrees of Alzheimer’s disease related neuropathology. Genetic association studies have successfully identified common variants associated with disease risk and phenotypic traits in Lewy body disease, yet little is known about the genetic contribution to neuropathological heterogeneity.Using summary statistics from Parkinson’s disease and Alzheimer’s disease genome-wide association studies, we calculated polygenic risk scores and investigated the relationship with Lewy, amyloid-β and tau pathology. Associations were nominated in neuropathologically defined samples with Lewy body disease from the Netherlands Brain Bank (n = 217) and followed up in an independent sample series from the Mayo Clinic Brain Bank (n = 394). We also generated stratified polygenic risk scores based on single-nucleotide polymorphisms annotated to eight functional pathways or cell types previously implicated in Parkinson’s disease and assessed for association with Lewy pathology in subgroups with and without significant Alzheimer’s disease co-pathology.In an ordinal logistic regression model, the Alzheimer’s disease polygenic risk score was associated with concomitant amyloid-β and tau pathology in both cohorts. Moreover, both cohorts showed a significant association between lysosomal pathway polygenic risk and Lewy pathology, which was more consistent than the association with a general Parkinson’s disease risk score and specific to the subset of samples without significant concomitant Alzheimer’s disease related neuropathology.Our findings provide proof of principle that the specific risk alleles a patient carries for Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s disease also influence key aspects of the underlying neuropathology in Lewy body disease. The interrelations between genetic architecture and neuropathology are complex, as our results implicate lysosomal risk loci specifically in the subset of samples without Alzheimer’s disease co-pathology. Our findings hold promise that genetic profiling may help predict the vulnerability to specific neuropathologies in Lewy body disease, with potential relevance for the further development of precision medicine in these disorders.

Funder

South-Eastern Norway Regional Health Authority

NIH

American Parkinson Disease Association

Dementia Association

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Neurology (clinical)

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