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Common variants in Alzheimer's disease and risk stratification by polygenic risk scores.

Authors :
de Rojas, Itziar
Moreno-Grau, Sonia
Tesi, Niccolo
Grenier-Boley, Benjamin
Andrade, Victor
Jansen, Iris E.
Pedersen, Nancy L.
Stringa, Najada
Zettergren, Anna
Hernández, Isabel
Montrreal, Laura
Antúnez, Carmen
Antonell, Anna
Tankard, Rick M.
Bis, Joshua C.
Sims, Rebecca
Bellenguez, Céline
Quintela, Inés
González-Perez, Antonio
Calero, Miguel
Source :
Nature Communications; 6/7/2021, Vol. 12 Issue 1, p1-16, 16p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Genetic discoveries of Alzheimer's disease are the drivers of our understanding, and together with polygenetic risk stratification can contribute towards planning of feasible and efficient preventive and curative clinical trials. We first perform a large genetic association study by merging all available case-control datasets and by-proxy study results (discovery n = 409,435 and validation size n = 58,190). Here, we add six variants associated with Alzheimer's disease risk (near APP, CHRNE, PRKD3/NDUFAF7, PLCG2 and two exonic variants in the SHARPIN gene). Assessment of the polygenic risk score and stratifying by APOE reveal a 4 to 5.5 years difference in median age at onset of Alzheimer's disease patients in APOE ɛ4 carriers. Because of this study, the underlying mechanisms of APP can be studied to refine the amyloid cascade and the polygenic risk score provides a tool to select individuals at high risk of Alzheimer's disease. Known genetic loci account for only a fraction of the genetic contribution to Alzheimer's disease. Here, the authors have performed a large genome-wide meta-analysis comprising 409,435 individuals to discover 6 new loci and demonstrate the efficacy of an Alzheimer's disease polygenic risk score. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
12
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nature Communications
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
150747610
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-22491-8