Stephens Morgan C, Li Jiayang, Mair Megan, Moore Justin, Zhu Katy, Tarkunde Akash, Amoh Bismark, Perez Alma M, Bhakare Arya, Guo Fangfei, Shulman Joshua M, Al-Ramahi Ismael, Botas Juan
Department of Molecular and Human Genetics, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX 77030, USA; Jan and Dan Duncan Neurological Research Institute, Houston, TX 77030, USA.
Department of Molecular and Human Genetics, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX 77030, USA; Jan and Dan Duncan Neurological Research Institute, Houston, TX 77030, USA; Department of Neuroscience, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX 77030, USA; Department of Neurology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX 77030, USA; Center for Alzheimer's and Neurodegenerative Disease, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX 77030, USA.
Am J Hum Genet. 2025 May 1;112(5):1081-1096. doi: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2025.03.012. Epub 2025 Apr 10.
Genome-wide association studies (GWASs) in Alzheimer disease (AD) have uncovered over 70 loci significantly associated with AD risk, but identifying the true causal gene(s) at these loci requires systematic functional validation that is rarely performed due to limitations of time and cost. Here, we integrate transcriptome-wide association study (TWAS) with colocalization analysis, fine-mapping, and additional annotation of AD GWAS variants to identify 123 genes at known and suggestive AD risk loci. A comparison with human AD brain transcriptome data confirmed that many of these candidate genes are dysregulated in human AD and correlate with neuropathology. We then tested all available orthologs in two well-established Drosophila AD models that express either wild-type tau or secreted β-amyloid (β42). Experimental perturbation of the 60 available candidates pinpointed 46 that modulated neuronal dysfunction in one or both fly models. The effects of 18 of these genes were concordant with the TWAS prediction, such that the direction of misexpression predicted to increase AD risk in humans exacerbated behavioral impairments in the AD fly models. Reversing the aberrant down- or upregulation of 11 of these genes (MTCH2, ELL, TAP2, HDC, DMWD, MYCL, SLC4A9, ABCA7, CSTF1, PTK2B, and CD2AP) proved neuroprotective in vivo. We further studied MTCH2 and found that it regulates steady-state tau protein levels in the Drosophila brain and reduces tau accumulation in human neural progenitor cells. This systematic, integrative approach effectively prioritizes genes at GWAS loci and reveals promising AD-relevant candidates for further investigation as risk factors or targets for therapeutic intervention.
阿尔茨海默病(AD)的全基因组关联研究(GWAS)已经发现了70多个与AD风险显著相关的基因座,但要确定这些基因座上真正的因果基因,需要进行系统的功能验证,然而由于时间和成本的限制,这种验证很少进行。在这里,我们将全转录组关联研究(TWAS)与共定位分析、精细定位以及AD GWAS变异的额外注释相结合,以在已知和提示性的AD风险基因座上识别出123个基因。与人类AD脑转录组数据的比较证实,这些候选基因中的许多在人类AD中表达失调,并且与神经病理学相关。然后,我们在两个成熟的果蝇AD模型中测试了所有可用的直系同源基因,这两个模型分别表达野生型tau或分泌型β-淀粉样蛋白(β42)。对60个可用候选基因的实验性扰动确定了46个在一个或两个果蝇模型中调节神经元功能障碍的基因。其中18个基因的作用与TWAS预测一致,即预测会增加人类AD风险的错误表达方向会加剧AD果蝇模型中的行为损伤。逆转其中11个基因(MTCH2、ELL、TAP2、HDC、DMWD、MYCL、SLC4A9、ABCA7、CSTF1、PTK2B和CD2AP)的异常下调或上调在体内具有神经保护作用。我们进一步研究了MTCH2,发现它调节果蝇脑中的稳态tau蛋白水平,并减少人类神经祖细胞中的tau积累。这种系统的综合方法有效地对GWAS基因座上的基因进行了优先级排序,并揭示了有希望的与AD相关的候选基因,可作为风险因素或治疗干预靶点进行进一步研究。