Back to Search Start Over

Liver-specific polygenic risk score is associated with Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis

Authors :
Daniel J. Panyard
Yuetiva K. Deming
Burcu F. Darst
Carol A. Van Hulle
Henrik Zetterberg
Kaj Blennow
Gwendlyn Kollmorgen
Ivonne Suridjan
Cynthia M. Carlsson
Sterling C. Johnson
Sanjay Asthana
Corinne D. Engelman
Qiongshi Lu
Source :
J Alzheimers Dis
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background: Our understanding of the pathophysiology underlying Alzheimer’s disease (AD) has benefited from genomic analyses, including those that leverage polygenic risk score (PRS) models of disease. The use of functional annotation has been able to improve the power of genomic models. Objective: We sought to leverage genomic functional annotations to build tissue-specific AD PRS models and study their relationship with AD and its biomarkers. Methods: We built 13 tissue-specific AD PRS and studied the scores’ relationships with AD diagnosis, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) amyloid, CSF tau, and other CSF biomarkers in two longitudinal cohort studies of AD. Results: The AD PRS model that was most predictive of AD diagnosis (even without APOE) was the liver AD PRS: n = 1,115; odds ratio = 2.15 (1.67–2.78), p = 3.62×10–9. The liver AD PRS was also statistically significantly associated with cerebrospinal fluid biomarker evidence of amyloid-β (Aβ42:Aβ40 ratio, p = 3.53×10–6) and the phosphorylated tau:amyloid-β ratio (p = 1.45×10–5). Conclusion: These findings provide further evidence of the role of the liver-functional genome in AD and the benefits of incorporating functional annotation into genomic research.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
J Alzheimers Dis
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....33d348a9e92a9a0c879b561c8529fe00