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A Multi-center Genome-wide Association Study of Cervical Dystonia

Authors :
Thorsten Odorfer
Ulrike M. Krämer
Sylvain Chouinard
Qin Hui
Allison Brashear
Rachel Saunders-Pullman
Stover Natividad
Miriam Neis
Alfredo Berardelli
Alan Freeman
Laura Scorr
Antonia Maurer
Kimberly Bambarger
Katie Holmes
Sebastian Loens
Susan H. Fox
Adam C. Cotton
William G. Ondo
Neepa Patel
Carlos Cruchaga
Katja Lohmann
Yunfeng Huang
Christine Klein
Marie Vidailhet
Meike Kasten
Brian Berman
Jens Volkmann
Stewart A. Factor
Max Borsche
Ramon L. Rodriguez
J. Douglas Bremner
Alberto J. Espay
Stephen G. Reich
Yan V. Sun
Friederike Borngräber
Andrea A. Kühn
Simone Zittel
Arshed A. Quyyumi
Chengchen Li
Samuel Frank
Hyder A. Jinnah
Richard L. Barbano
Mathias Gelderblom
Inke R. König
Tobias Bäumer
Emmanuel Roze
Joel S. Perlmutter
Mark S. LeDoux
Gamze Kilic-Berkmen
Viola Vaccarino
Joseph Jankovic
Irene A. Malaty
Alexander Pantelyat
Pinky Agarwal
Sarah Pirio-Richardson
Source :
Mov Disord
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

BACKGROUND Several monogenic causes for isolated dystonia have been identified, but they collectively account for only a small proportion of cases. Two genome-wide association studies have reported a few potential dystonia risk loci; but conclusions have been limited by small sample sizes, partial coverage of genetic variants, or poor reproducibility. OBJECTIVE To identify robust genetic variants and loci in a large multicenter cervical dystonia cohort using a genome-wide approach. METHODS We performed a genome-wide association study using cervical dystonia samples from the Dystonia Coalition. Logistic and linear regressions, including age, sex, and population structure as covariates, were employed to assess variant- and gene-based genetic associations with disease status and age at onset. We also performed a replication study for an identified genome-wide significant signal. RESULTS After quality control, 919 cervical dystonia patients compared with 1491 controls of European ancestry were included in the analyses. We identified one genome-wide significant variant (rs2219975, chromosome 3, upstream of COL8A1, P-value 3.04 × 10-8 ). The association was not replicated in a newly genotyped sample of 473 cervical dystonia cases and 481 controls. Gene-based analysis identified DENND1A to be significantly associated with cervical dystonia (P-value 1.23 × 10-6 ). One low-frequency variant was associated with lower age-at-onset (16.4 ± 2.9 years, P-value = 3.07 × 10-8 , minor allele frequency = 0.01), located within the GABBR2 gene on chromosome 9 (rs147331823). CONCLUSION The genetic underpinnings of cervical dystonia are complex and likely consist of multiple distinct variants of small effect sizes. Larger sample sizes may be needed to provide sufficient statistical power to address the presumably multi-genic etiology of cervical dystonia. © 2021 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Mov Disord
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....357c1fa607a1eb6512de95ae80d74173