First GWAS on Alzheimer’s Disease in Argentina and Chile populations

Author:

Dalmasso Maria CarolinaORCID,de Rojas ItziarORCID,Olivar Natividad,Muchnik Carolina,Angel Bárbara,Gloger Sergio,Sanchez Abalos Mariana Soledad,Chacón M.Victoria,Aránguiz Rafael,Orellana Paulina,Cuesta Carolina,Galeano Pablo,Campanelli Lorenzo,Novack Gisela Vanina,Martinez Luis Eduardo,Medel Nancy,Lisso Julieta,Sevillano Zulma,Irureta Nicolás,Castaño Eduardo Miguel,Montrreal Laura,Thoenes Michaela,Hanses Claudia,Heilmann-Heimbach Stefanie,Kairiyama Claudia,Mintz Ines,Villella Ivana,Rueda Fabiana,Romero Amanda,Wukitsevits Nancy,Quiroga Ivana,Gona Cristina,Lambert Jean-CharlesORCID,Solis Patricia,Politis Daniel Gustavo,Mangone Carlos Alberto,Gonzalez-Billault Christian,Boada Mercè,Tàrraga Lluís,Slachevsky Andrea,Albala Cecilia,Fuentes Patricio,Kochen Silvia,Brusco Luis Ignacio,Ruiz AgustínORCID,Morelli Laura,Ramírez AlfredoORCID,

Abstract

AbstractINTRODUCTIONGenome-wide association studies (GWAS) are fundamental for identifying loci associated with diseases. However, they require replication in other ethnicities.METHODSwe performed a GWAS on sporadic Alzheimer’s disease (AD) including 540 patients and 852 controls from Argentina and Chile. We explored the variants associated with AD in European GWAS from European Alzheimer’s and Dementia Biobank (EADB) and tested their genetic risk score (GRS) performance in this admixed population.RESULTSwe detectedAPOE4as single genome-wide significant signal (OR=2.93[2.37-3.63], p=2.6×10−23), and fifteen additional suggestive signals previously undetected. Nine of the 83 variants reported by EADB in Europeans were replicated, and the AD-GRS presented similar performance in this Latin population, despite the score diminishes when the Native American ancestry rises.DISCUSSIONwe report the first GWAS on AD in a population from South America. It shows shared genetics that modulate AD risk between the European and the Latin American populations.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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