Lee J H, Mayeux R, Mayo D, Mo J, Santana V, Williamson J, Flaquer A, Ciappa A, Rondon H, Estevez P, Lantigua R, Kawarai T, Toulina A, Medrano M, Torres M, Stern Y, Tycko B, Rogaeva E, St George-Hyslop P, Knowles J A
The Taub Institute on Alzheimer's Disease and the Aging Brain, Columbia University, New York, NY 10032, USA.
Mol Psychiatry. 2004 Nov;9(11):1042-51. doi: 10.1038/sj.mp.4001538.
Familial Alzheimer's disease (AD [MIM 104300]) has been a focus of intense investigation, primarily in Caucasian families from Europe and North America families. Although the late-onset form of familial AD, beginning after age 65 years, has been linked to regions on chromosomes 10q and 12p, the specific genetic variants have not yet been consistently identified. Using a unique cohort of families of Caribbean Hispanics ancestry, we screened the genome using 340 markers on 490 family members from 96 families with predominantly late-onset AD. We observed the strongest support for linkage on 18q (LOD=3.14). However, 17 additional markers (chromosomes 1-6, 8, 10, 12, and 14) exceeded a two-point LOD score of 1.0 under the affecteds-only autosomal dominant model or affected sibpair model. As we previously reported the fine-mapping effort on 12p showing modest evidence of linkage, we focused our fine-mapping efforts on two other candidate regions in the current report, namely 10q and 18q. We added 31 family members and eight additional Caribbean Hispanic families to fine map 10q and 18q. With additional microsatellite markers, the evidence for linkage for 18q strengthened near 112 cM, where the two-point LOD score for D18S541 was 3.37 and the highest NPL score in that region was 3.65 (P=0.000177). This narrow region contains a small number of genes expressed in the brain. However, at 10q (134-138 cM), the NPL score decreased from 3.15 (P=0.000486) to 2.1 (P=0.0218), but two broad peaks remained overlapping with previously reported peaks. Our results provide modest support for linkage on 10q and 12p in this cohort of Caribbean Hispanic families with familial Alzheimer's disease, and strong evidence for a new locus on 18q.
家族性阿尔茨海默病(AD [MIM 104300])一直是深入研究的焦点,主要集中在来自欧洲的白种人家族以及北美家族。尽管65岁以后发病的晚发型家族性AD与10号染色体长臂和12号染色体短臂上的区域有关联,但尚未始终如一地鉴定出具体的基因变异。我们利用一组具有加勒比西班牙裔血统的独特家族队列,对96个主要为晚发型AD家族的490名家庭成员,使用340个标记进行了全基因组筛查。我们观察到18号染色体长臂上的连锁支持度最强(LOD = 3.14)。然而,在仅患受累者的常染色体显性模型或受累同胞对模型下,另外17个标记(位于1 - 6号、8号、10号、12号和14号染色体)的两点LOD得分超过了1.0。正如我们之前报道的对12号染色体短臂精细定位的研究显示出适度的连锁证据,在本报告中我们将精细定位工作聚焦于另外两个候选区域,即10号染色体长臂和18号染色体长臂。我们增加了31名家庭成员和另外8个加勒比西班牙裔家族,以对10号染色体长臂和18号染色体长臂进行精细定位。利用额外的微卫星标记,18号染色体长臂在112 cM附近的连锁证据得到加强,其中D18S541的两点LOD得分为3.37,该区域的最高NPL得分为3.65(P = 0.000177)。这个狭窄区域包含少数在大脑中表达的基因。然而,在10号染色体长臂(134 - 138 cM)处,NPL得分从3.15(P = 0.000486)降至2.1(P = 0.0218),但仍有两个宽峰与先前报道的峰重叠。我们的研究结果为这个患有家族性阿尔茨海默病的加勒比西班牙裔家族队列中10号染色体长臂和12号染色体短臂上的连锁提供了适度支持,并为18号染色体长臂上的一个新位点提供了有力证据。