Schjeide Brit-Maren M, Schnack Cathrin, Lambert Jean-Charles, Lill Christina M, Kirchheiner Julia, Tumani Hayrettin, Otto Markus, Tanzi Rudolph E, Lehrach Hans, Amouyel Philippe, von Arnim Christine A F, Bertram Lars
Department Vertebrate Genomics, Max Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics, Berlin, Germany.
Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2011 Feb;68(2):207-13. doi: 10.1001/archgenpsychiatry.2010.196.
Two recent and simultaneously published genome-wide association studies independently implicated clusterin (CLU), complement receptor 1 (CR1), and phosphatidylinositol binding clathrin assembly protein (PICALM) as putative novel Alzheimer disease (AD) risk loci. Despite their strong statistical support, all 3 signals emerged from heterogeneous case-control populations and lack replication in different settings.
To determine whether genetic variants in CLU, CR1, and PICALM confer risk for AD in independent data sets (n = 4254) and to test the impact of these markers on cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)-Aβ42 and total-tau protein levels (n = 425).
Genetic association study using family-based and case-control designs.
Ambulatory or hospitalized care.
Family samples originate from mostly multiplex pedigrees recruited at different centers in the United States (1245 families, 2654 individuals with AD, and 1175 unaffected relatives). Unrelated case-control subjects originate from 1 clinical center in Germany (214 individuals with AD and 211 controls). All subjects were of European descent.
The association between 5 genetic variants in CLU, CR1, and PICALM and risk for AD, and the correlation between these 5 genetic variants and CSF-Aβ42 and tau levels.
All 3 investigated loci showed significant associations between risk for AD (1-tailed P values ranging from <.001 to .02) and consistent effect sizes and direction. For each locus, the overall evidence of association was substantially strengthened on meta-analysis of all available data (2-tailed P values ranging from 1.1 × 10(-16) to 4.1 × 10⁻⁷). Of all markers tested, only rs541458 in PICALM was shown to have an effect on CSF protein levels, suggesting that the AD risk allele is associated with decreased CSF Aβ42 levels (2-tailed P = .002).
This study provides compelling independent evidence that genetic variants in CLU, CR1, and PICALM are genetically associated with risk for AD. Furthermore, the CSF biomarker analyses provide a first insight into the potentially predominant pathogenetic mechanism(s) underlying the association between AD risk and PICALM.
两项近期同时发表的全基因组关联研究独立表明,簇集蛋白(CLU)、补体受体1(CR1)和磷脂酰肌醇结合网格蛋白组装蛋白(PICALM)是新发现的阿尔茨海默病(AD)风险基因座。尽管有强有力的统计学支持,但这三个信号均来自异质性病例对照人群,且缺乏在不同环境中的重复验证。
确定CLU、CR1和PICALM中的基因变异在独立数据集(n = 4254)中是否会增加AD风险,并测试这些标志物对脑脊液(CSF)-Aβ42和总tau蛋白水平(n = 425)的影响。
采用基于家系和病例对照设计的基因关联研究。
门诊或住院治疗。
家系样本大多来自在美国不同中心招募的多重家系(1245个家系,2654名AD患者,1175名未受影响的亲属)。非相关病例对照受试者来自德国的一个临床中心(214名AD患者和211名对照)。所有受试者均为欧洲血统。
CLU、CR1和PICALM中5个基因变异与AD风险之间的关联,以及这5个基因变异与CSF-Aβ42和tau水平之间的相关性。
所有3个研究基因座均显示AD风险之间存在显著关联(单尾P值范围为<.001至.02),且效应大小和方向一致。对于每个基因座,对所有可用数据进行荟萃分析后,关联的总体证据得到了显著加强(双尾P值范围为1.1×10⁻¹⁶至4.1×10⁻⁷)。在所有测试的标志物中,仅PICALM中的rs541458被证明对CSF蛋白水平有影响,这表明AD风险等位基因与CSF Aβ42水平降低有关(双尾P = .002)。
本研究提供了令人信服的独立证据,表明CLU、CR1和PICALM中的基因变异与AD风险存在遗传关联。此外,CSF生物标志物分析首次深入了解了AD风险与PICALM之间关联的潜在主要致病机制。