From the Institute of Molecular Medicine, McGovern Medical School at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (M.F., X.J.).
Department of Neurology, Boston University School of Medicine, MA (C.L.S., S. Seshadri).
Stroke. 2018 Aug;49(8):1812-1819. doi: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.118.020689.
Background and Purpose- White matter hyperintensities (WMH) on brain magnetic resonance imaging are typical signs of cerebral small vessel disease and may indicate various preclinical, age-related neurological disorders, such as stroke. Though WMH are highly heritable, known common variants explain a small proportion of the WMH variance. The contribution of low-frequency/rare coding variants to WMH burden has not been explored. Methods- In the discovery sample we recruited 20 719 stroke/dementia-free adults from 13 population-based cohort studies within the Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology consortium, among which 17 790 were of European ancestry and 2929 of African ancestry. We genotyped these participants at ≈250 000 mostly exonic variants with Illumina HumanExome BeadChip arrays. We performed ethnicity-specific linear regression on rank-normalized WMH in each study separately, which were then combined in meta-analyses to test for association with single variants and genes aggregating the effects of putatively functional low-frequency/rare variants. We then sought replication of the top findings in 1192 adults (European ancestry) with whole exome/genome sequencing data from 2 independent studies. Results- At 17q25, we confirmed the association of multiple common variants in TRIM65, FBF1, and ACOX1 ( P<6×10). We also identified a novel association with 2 low-frequency nonsynonymous variants in MRPL38 (lead, rs34136221; P=4.5×10) partially independent of known common signal ( P=1.4×10). We further identified a locus at 2q33 containing common variants in NBEAL1, CARF, and WDR12 (lead, rs2351524; P=1.9×10). Although our novel findings were not replicated because of limited power and possible differences in study design, meta-analysis of the discovery and replication samples yielded stronger association for the 2 low-frequency MRPL38 variants ( P=2.8×10). Conclusions- Both common and low-frequency/rare functional variants influence WMH. Larger replication and experimental follow-up are essential to confirm our findings and uncover the biological causal mechanisms of age-related WMH.
背景与目的- 脑磁共振成像上的脑白质高信号(WMH)是脑小血管疾病的典型征象,可能预示着各种临床前、与年龄相关的神经退行性疾病,如中风。尽管 WMH 具有高度遗传性,但已知的常见变异仅能解释 WMH 变异的一小部分。低频/稀有编码变异对 WMH 负担的贡献尚未得到探索。方法- 在发现样本中,我们从 Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology 联盟的 13 个人群队列研究中招募了 20719 名无中风/痴呆的成年人,其中 17790 名具有欧洲血统,2929 名具有非洲血统。我们使用 Illumina HumanExome BeadChip 芯片对这些参与者进行了 ≈250000 个主要外显子变异的基因分型。我们在每个研究中分别对秩标准化的 WMH 进行了种族特异性线性回归,然后将这些结果合并进行荟萃分析,以测试与单变异和聚合潜在功能低频/稀有变异效应的基因的关联。然后,我们在来自 2 个独立研究的 1192 名成年人(欧洲血统)的全外显子/基因组测序数据中寻找了这些顶级发现的复制。结果- 在 17q25 上,我们证实了 TRIM65、FBF1 和 ACOX1 中的多个常见变异与 WMH 之间存在关联( P<6×10)。我们还发现了与 MRPL38 中的 2 个低频非同义变异有关的新关联(先导,rs34136221; P=4.5×10),这部分与已知的共同信号无关( P=1.4×10)。我们进一步在 2q33 上确定了一个包含 NBEAL1、CARF 和 WDR12 中的常见变异的基因座(先导,rs2351524; P=1.9×10)。尽管由于样本量有限和研究设计可能存在差异,我们的新发现没有得到复制,但发现和复制样本的荟萃分析对 2 个低频 MRPL38 变异的关联更强( P=2.8×10)。结论- 常见变异和低频/稀有功能变异均影响 WMH。更大规模的复制和实验随访对于证实我们的发现并揭示与年龄相关的 WMH 的生物学因果机制至关重要。