Structural variants linked to Alzheimer’s Disease and other common age-related clinical and neuropathologic traits

Author:

Vialle Ricardo AORCID,de Paiva Lopes KatiaORCID,Li Yan,Ng BernardORCID,Schneider Julie A,Buchman Aron SORCID,Wang Yanling,Farfel Jose M,Barnes Lisa LORCID,Wingo Aliza PORCID,Wingo Thomas SORCID,Seyfried Nicholas TORCID,De Jager Philip LORCID,Gaiteri ChrisORCID,Tasaki Shinya,Bennett David A

Abstract

ABSTRACTAdvances have led to a greater understanding of the genetics of Alzheimer’s Disease (AD). However, the gap between the predicted and observed genetic heritability estimates when using single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and small indel data remains. Large genomic rearrangements, known as structural variants (SVs), have the potential to account for this missing genetic heritability. By leveraging data from two ongoing cohort studies of aging and dementia, the Religious Orders Study and Rush Memory and Aging Project (ROS/MAP), we performed genome-wide association analysis testing around 20,000 common SVs from 1,088 participants with whole genome sequencing (WGS) data. A range of Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Disorders (AD/ADRD) clinical and pathologic traits were examined. Given the limited sample size, no genome-wide significant association was found, but we mapped SVs across 81 AD risk loci and discovered 22 SVs in linkage disequilibrium (LD) with GWAS lead variants and directly associated with AD/ADRD phenotypes (nominalP< 0.05). The strongest association was a deletion of anAluelement in the 3’UTR of theTMEM106Bgene. This SV was in high LD with the respective AD GWAS locus and was associated with multiple AD/ADRD phenotypes, including tangle density, TDP-43, and cognitive resilience. The deletion of this element was also linked to lower TMEM106B protein abundance. We also found a 22 kb deletion associated with depression in ROSMAP and bearing similar association patterns as AD GWAS SNPs at theIQCKlocus. In addition, genome-wide scans allowed the identification of 7 SVs, with no LD with SNPs and nominally associated with AD/ADRD traits. This result suggests potentially new ADRD risk loci not discoverable using SNP data. Among these findings, we highlight a 5.6 kb duplication of coding regions of the geneC1orf186at chromosome 1 associated with indices of cognitive impairment, decline, and resilience. While further replication in independent datasets is needed to validate these findings, our results support the potential roles of common structural variations in the pathogenesis of AD/ADRD.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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