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Heritability and genetic variance of dementia with Lewy bodies.

Authors :
Guerreiro R
Escott-Price V
Hernandez DG
Kun-Rodrigues C
Ross OA
Orme T
Neto JL
Carmona S
Dehghani N
Eicher JD
Shepherd C
Parkkinen L
Darwent L
Heckman MG
Scholz SW
Troncoso JC
Pletnikova O
Dawson T
Rosenthal L
Ansorge O
Clarimon J
Lleo A
Morenas-Rodriguez E
Clark L
Honig LS
Marder K
Lemstra A
Rogaeva E
St George-Hyslop P
Londos E
Zetterberg H
Barber I
Braae A
Brown K
Morgan K
Troakes C
Al-Sarraj S
Lashley T
Holton J
Compta Y
Van Deerlin V
Serrano GE
Beach TG
Lesage S
Galasko D
Masliah E
Santana I
Pastor P
Diez-Fairen M
Aguilar M
Tienari PJ
Myllykangas L
Oinas M
Revesz T
Lees A
Boeve BF
Petersen RC
Ferman TJ
Graff-Radford N
Cairns NJ
Morris JC
Pickering-Brown S
Mann D
Halliday GM
Hardy J
Trojanowski JQ
Dickson DW
Singleton A
Stone DJ
Bras J
Source :
Neurobiology of disease [Neurobiol Dis] 2019 Jul; Vol. 127, pp. 492-501. Date of Electronic Publication: 2019 Apr 03.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Recent large-scale genetic studies have allowed for the first glimpse of the effects of common genetic variability in dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB), identifying risk variants with appreciable effect sizes. However, it is currently well established that a substantial portion of the genetic heritable component of complex traits is not captured by genome-wide significant SNPs. To overcome this issue, we have estimated the proportion of phenotypic variance explained by genetic variability (SNP heritability) in DLB using a method that is unbiased by allele frequency or linkage disequilibrium properties of the underlying variants. This shows that the heritability of DLB is nearly twice as high as previous estimates based on common variants only (31% vs 59.9%). We also determine the amount of phenotypic variance in DLB that can be explained by recent polygenic risk scores from either Parkinson's disease (PD) or Alzheimer's disease (AD), and show that, despite being highly significant, they explain a low amount of variance. Additionally, to identify pleiotropic events that might improve our understanding of the disease, we performed genetic correlation analyses of DLB with over 200 diseases and biomedically relevant traits. Our data shows that DLB has a positive correlation with education phenotypes, which is opposite to what occurs in AD. Overall, our data suggests that novel genetic risk factors for DLB should be identified by larger GWAS and these are likely to be independent from known AD and PD risk variants.<br /> (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1095-953X
Volume :
127
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Neurobiology of disease
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
30953760
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nbd.2019.04.004