Logue Mark W, Schu Matthew, Vardarajan Badri N, Buros Jacki, Green Robert C, Go Rodney C P, Griffith Patrick, Obisesan Thomas O, Shatz Rhonna, Borenstein Amy, Cupples L Adrienne, Lunetta Kathryn L, Fallin M Daniele, Baldwin Clinton T, Farrer Lindsay A
Department of Medicine, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA 02118, USA.
Arch Neurol. 2011 Dec;68(12):1569-79. doi: 10.1001/archneurol.2011.646.
To evaluate the association of genetic variation with late-onset Alzheimer disease (AD) in African Americans, including genes implicated in recent genome-wide association studies of whites.
We analyzed a genome-wide set of 2.5 million imputed markers to evaluate the genetic basis of AD in an African American population.
Five hundred thirteen well-characterized African American AD cases and 496 cognitively normal African American control subjects.
Data were collected from multiple sites as part of the Multi-Institutional Research on Alzheimer Genetic Epidemiology (MIRAGE) Study and the Henry Ford Health System as part of the Genetic and Environmental Risk Factors for Alzheimer Disease Among African Americans (GenerAAtions) Study.
Several significant single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were observed in the region of the apolipoprotein E gene (APOE). After adjusting for the confounding effects of APOE genotype, one of these SNPs, rs6859 in PVRL2, remained significantly associated with AD (P = .0087). Association was also observed with SNPs in CLU, PICALM, BIN1, EPHA1, MS4A, ABCA7, and CD33, although the effect direction for some SNPs and the most significant SNPs differed from findings in data sets consisting of whites. Finally, using the African American genome-wide association study data set as a discovery sample, we obtained suggestive evidence of association with SNPs for several novel candidate genes.
Some genes contribute to AD pathogenesis in both white and African American cohorts, although it is unclear whether the causal variants are the same. A larger African American sample will be needed to confirm novel gene associations, which may be population specific.
评估非洲裔美国人中基因变异与晚发型阿尔茨海默病(AD)的关联,包括近期白人全基因组关联研究中涉及的基因。
我们分析了一组全基因组范围内的250万个推算标记,以评估非洲裔美国人群中AD的遗传基础。
513例特征明确的非洲裔美国AD患者和496名认知正常的非洲裔美国对照者。
数据是作为阿尔茨海默病遗传流行病学多机构研究(MIRAGE)的一部分,从多个地点收集的,以及作为非洲裔美国人阿尔茨海默病的遗传和环境风险因素(GenerAAtions)研究的一部分,从亨利福特健康系统收集的。
在载脂蛋白E基因(APOE)区域观察到几个显著的单核苷酸多态性(SNP)。在调整APOE基因型的混杂效应后,其中一个SNP,PVRL2基因中的rs6859,仍与AD显著相关(P = 0.0087)。在CLU、PICALM、BIN1、EPHA1、MS4A、ABCA7和CD33基因的SNP中也观察到关联,尽管一些SNP和最显著SNP的效应方向与白人数据集的研究结果不同。最后,使用非洲裔美国人全基因组关联研究数据集作为发现样本,我们获得了与几个新候选基因的SNP关联的提示性证据。
一些基因在白人和非洲裔美国人队列中均对AD发病机制有影响,尽管尚不清楚因果变异是否相同。需要更大规模的非洲裔美国人样本以确认新的基因关联,这些关联可能具有人群特异性。