The genetic drivers of juvenile, young, and early-onset Parkinson’s Disease in India
Author:
Andrews Shan VORCID, Kukkle Prashanth LORCID, Menon Ramesh, Geetha Thenral S, Goyal Vinay, Kandadai Rukmini Mridula, Kumar Hrishikesh, Borgohain Rupam, Mukherjee Adreesh, Wadia Pettarusp M, Yadav Ravi, Desai SoahamORCID, Kumar Niraj, Joshi DeepikaORCID, Murugan Sakthivel, Biswas AtanuORCID, Pal Pramod KORCID, Oliver Merina, Nair Sandhya, Kayalvizhi Anbu, Samson Praveena L, Deshmukh Manjari, Bassi Akshi, Sandeep Charugulla, Mandloi Nitin, Davis Oliver B, Roberts Melissa A, Leto Dara E, Henry Anastasia G, Di Paolo Gilbert, Muthane Uday, Das Shymal K, Peterson Andrew S, Sandmann Thomas, Gupta Ravi, Ramprasad Vedam L,
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundRecent studies have advanced our understanding of the genetic drivers of Parkinson’s Disease (PD). Rare variants in more than 20 genes are considered causal for PD, and the latest PD GWAS study identified 90 independent risk loci. However, there remains a gap in our understanding of PD genetics outside of the European populations in which the vast majority of these studies were focused.ObjectivesTo identify genetic risk factors for PD in a South Asian population.Methods674 PD subjects predominantly with age of onset ≤ 50 years (encompassing juvenile, young, or early-onset PD) were recruited from 10 specialty movement disorder centers across India over a 2-year period. 1,376 control subjects were selected from the reference population GenomeAsia, Phase 2. We performed various case-only and case-control genetic analyses for PD diagnosis and age of onset.ResultsA genome-wide significant signal for PD diagnosis was identified in theSNCAregion, strongly colocalizing withSNCAregion signal from European PD GWAS. PD cases with pathogenic mutations in PD genes exhibited, on average, lower PD polygenic risk scores than PD cases lacking any PD gene mutations. Gene burden studies of rare, predicted deleterious variants identifiedBSN, encoding the presynaptic protein Bassoon that has been previously associated with neurodegenerative disease.ConclusionsThis study constitutes the largest genetic investigation of PD in a South Asian population to date. Future work should seek to expand sample numbers in this population to enable improved statistical power to detect PD genes in this understudied group.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
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