Bradley Walter G, Andrew Angeline S, Traynor Bryan J, Chiò Adriano, Butt Tanya H, Stommel Elijah W
Department of Neurology, Miller School of Medicine, University of Miami, Miami, Florida, USA.
Department of Neurology, Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, Hanover, New Hampshire, USA.
Ann Neurosci. 2018 Dec;25(4):261-267. doi: 10.1159/000495321. Epub 2018 Dec 4.
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), Alzheimer's, and Parkinson's diseases are age-related neurodegenerative diseases. ALS is not a single entity but a syndrome with many different causes. In all 3 diseases, gene mutations account for only 10-15% of cases. Many environmental and lifestyle factors have been implicated as risk factors for ALS, though none have been proven to cause the disease. It is generally believed that ALS results from interactions between environmental risk factors and genetic predisposing factors. The advent of next-generation sequencing and recent advances in research into environmental risk factors offer the opportunity to investigate these interactions.
We propose a hypothesis to explain the syndrome of ALS based on the interaction of many individual environmental risk factors with many individual genetic predisposing factors. We hypothesize that there are many such combinations of individual, specific, genetic, and environmental factors, and that each combination can lead to the development of the syndrome of ALS. We also propose a hypothesis that explains the overlap between the age-related neurodegenerations and their genetic underpinnings. Age and duration of exposure are crucial factors in these age-related neurodegenerative diseases, and we consider how these may relate to gene-environment interactions.
To date, genetic studies and environmental studies have investigated the causes of ALS separately. We argue that this univariate approach will not lead to discoveries of important gene-environment interactions. We propose new research approaches to investigating gene-environment interactions based on these hypotheses.
肌萎缩侧索硬化症(ALS)、阿尔茨海默病和帕金森病都是与年龄相关的神经退行性疾病。ALS并非单一疾病实体,而是一种由多种不同病因引起的综合征。在这三种疾病中,基因突变仅占病例的10 - 15%。许多环境和生活方式因素被认为是ALS的风险因素,尽管尚无证据表明它们会导致该疾病。一般认为,ALS是环境风险因素与遗传易感性因素相互作用的结果。新一代测序技术的出现以及环境风险因素研究的最新进展为研究这些相互作用提供了契机。
我们提出一个假说,基于许多个体环境风险因素与许多个体遗传易感性因素的相互作用来解释ALS综合征。我们假设存在许多这样的个体、特定、遗传和环境因素的组合,并且每种组合都可能导致ALS综合征的发生。我们还提出一个假说,解释与年龄相关的神经退行性变及其遗传基础之间的重叠。年龄和暴露持续时间是这些与年龄相关的神经退行性疾病的关键因素,我们思考这些因素可能如何与基因 - 环境相互作用相关。
迄今为止,遗传学研究和环境研究分别调查了ALS的病因。我们认为这种单变量方法不会导致发现重要的基因 - 环境相互作用。基于这些假说,我们提出了研究基因 - 环境相互作用的新研究方法。