Whole-genome sequencing reveals new Alzheimer's disease-associated rare variants in loci related to synaptic function and neuronal development.

Prokopenko, Dmitry, Sarah L Morgan, Kristina Mullin, Oliver Hofmann, Brad Chapman, Rory Kirchner, Sandeep Amberkar, Inken Wohlers, Christoph Lange, Winston Hide, Lars Bertram, and Rudolph E Tanzi. 2020. “Whole-Genome Sequencing Reveals New Alzheimer’s Disease-Associated Rare Variants in Loci Related to Synaptic Function and Neuronal Development..” MedRxiv : The Preprint Server for Health Sciences.

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Genome-wide association studies have led to numerous genetic loci associated with Alzheimer's disease (AD). Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) now permit genome-wide analyses to identify rare variants contributing to AD risk.

METHODS: We performed single-variant and spatial clustering-based testing on rare variants (minor allele frequency ≤1%) in a family-based WGS-based association study of 2,247 subjects from 605 multiplex AD families, followed by replication in 1,669 unrelated individuals.

RESULTS: We identified 13 new AD candidate loci that yielded consistent rare-variant signals in discovery and replication cohorts (4 from single-variant, 9 from spatial-clustering), implicating these genes: FNBP1L, SEL1L, LINC00298, PRKCH, C15ORF41, C2CD3, KIF2A, APC, LHX9, NALCN, CTNNA2, SYTL3, CLSTN2.

DISCUSSION: Downstream analyses of these novel loci highlight synaptic function, in contrast to common AD-associated variants, which implicate innate immunity. These loci have not been previously associated with AD, emphasizing the ability of WGS to identify AD-associated rare variants, particularly outside of coding regions.

Last updated on 02/13/2025
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