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在非洲和非洲混合人群中与帕金森病相关的遗传风险基因座和因果关系的鉴定:一项全基因组关联研究。

Identification of genetic risk loci and causal insights associated with Parkinson's disease in African and African admixed populations: a genome-wide association study.

机构信息

Department of Neuromuscular Diseases, UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology, London, UK.

Center for Alzheimer's and Related Dementias, National Institute on Aging and National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA.

出版信息

Lancet Neurol. 2023 Nov;22(11):1015-1025. doi: 10.1016/S1474-4422(23)00283-1. Epub 2023 Aug 23.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

An understanding of the genetic mechanisms underlying diseases in ancestrally diverse populations is an important step towards development of targeted treatments. Research in African and African admixed populations can enable mapping of complex traits, because of their genetic diversity, extensive population substructure, and distinct linkage disequilibrium patterns. We aimed to do a comprehensive genome-wide assessment in African and African admixed individuals to better understand the genetic architecture of Parkinson's disease in these underserved populations.

METHODS

We performed a genome-wide association study (GWAS) in people of African and African admixed ancestry with and without Parkinson's disease. Individuals were included from several cohorts that were available as a part of the Global Parkinson's Genetics Program, the International Parkinson's Disease Genomics Consortium Africa, and 23andMe. A diagnosis of Parkinson's disease was confirmed clinically by a movement disorder specialist for every individual in each cohort, except for 23andMe, in which it was self-reported based on clinical diagnosis. We characterised ancestry-specific risk, differential haplotype structure and admixture, coding and structural genetic variation, and enzymatic activity.

FINDINGS

We included 197 918 individuals (1488 cases and 196 430 controls) in our genome-wide analysis. We identified a novel common risk factor for Parkinson's disease (overall meta-analysis odds ratio for risk of Parkinson's disease 1·58 [95% CI 1·37-1·80], p=2·397 × 10) and age at onset at the GBA1 locus, rs3115534-G (age at onset β=-2·00 [SE=0·57], p=0·0005, for African ancestry; and β=-4·15 [0·58], p=0·015, for African admixed ancestry), which was rare in non-African or non-African admixed populations. Downstream short-read and long-read whole-genome sequencing analyses did not reveal any coding or structural variant underlying the GWAS signal. The identified signal seems to be associated with decreased glucocerebrosidase activity.

INTERPRETATION

Our study identified a novel genetic risk factor in GBA1 in people of African ancestry, which has not been seen in European populations, and it could be a major mechanistic basis of Parkinson's disease in African populations. This population-specific variant exerts substantial risk on Parkinson's disease as compared with common variation identified through GWAS and it was found to be present in 39% of the cases assessed in this study. This finding highlights the importance of understanding ancestry-specific genetic risk in complex diseases, a particularly crucial point as the Parkinson's disease field moves towards targeted treatments in clinical trials. The distinctive genetics of African populations highlights the need for equitable inclusion of ancestrally diverse groups in future trials, which will be a valuable step towards gaining insights into novel genetic determinants underlying the causes of Parkinson's disease. This finding opens new avenues towards RNA-based and other therapeutic strategies aimed at reducing lifetime risk of Parkinson's disease.

FUNDING

The Global Parkinson's Genetics Program, which is funded by the Aligning Science Across Parkinson's initiative, and The Michael J Fox Foundation for Parkinson's Research.

摘要

背景

了解不同祖先人群中疾病的遗传机制是开发靶向治疗的重要步骤。由于非洲和非洲混合人群的遗传多样性、广泛的人群亚结构和独特的连锁不平衡模式,他们的研究可以帮助我们绘制复杂特征图谱。我们旨在对非洲和非洲混合人群进行全面的全基因组评估,以更好地了解这些服务不足人群中帕金森病的遗传结构。

方法

我们对有或没有帕金森病的非洲和非洲混合人群进行了全基因组关联研究(GWAS)。这些个体来自全球帕金森遗传学计划、国际帕金森病遗传学联盟非洲和 23andMe 等多个队列,除了 23andMe 之外,每个队列中的个体都是由运动障碍专家根据临床诊断进行帕金森病确诊,而 23andMe 则是基于临床诊断进行自我报告。我们对特定于祖先的风险、差异单倍型结构和混合、编码和结构遗传变异以及酶活性进行了描述。

结果

我们对 197918 名个体(1488 例病例和 196430 例对照)进行了全基因组分析。我们在 GBA1 基因座发现了一个新的帕金森病常见风险因素(总体荟萃分析风险比为 1.58 [95%CI 1.37-1.80],p=2.397×10)和发病年龄,rs3115534-G(发病年龄β=-2.00 [0.57],p=0.0005,非洲血统;β=-4.15 [0.58],p=0.015,非洲混合血统),该基因在非非洲或非非洲混合人群中很少见。下游短读长和长读长全基因组测序分析没有发现任何与 GWAS 信号相关的编码或结构变异。该确定的信号似乎与葡萄糖脑苷脂酶活性降低有关。

解释

我们的研究在非洲人群的 GBA1 中确定了一个新的遗传风险因素,这在欧洲人群中没有发现,它可能是非洲人群中帕金森病的主要机制基础。与通过 GWAS 确定的常见变异相比,这种特定于人群的变异对帕金森病有很大的风险,在本研究评估的病例中,有 39%存在这种变异。这一发现强调了在复杂疾病中理解特定于祖先的遗传风险的重要性,特别是在帕金森病领域向临床试验中的靶向治疗发展的关键时刻。非洲人群的独特遗传学强调了在未来试验中公平纳入祖先多样化群体的必要性,这将是朝着了解帕金森病病因的新遗传决定因素迈出的宝贵一步。这一发现为旨在降低帕金森病终生风险的 RNA 为基础和其他治疗策略开辟了新途径。

资金

全球帕金森遗传学计划,该计划由帕金森病跨学科研究倡议资助,以及迈克尔 J 福克斯基金会帕金森病研究。

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