Back to Search Start Over

Creating the Pick’s disease International Consortium: Association study of MAPT H2 haplotype with risk of Pick’s disease

Authors :
Rebecca R Valentino
William J Scotton
Shanu F Roemer
Tammaryn Lashley
Michael G Heckman
Maryam Shoai
Alejandro Martinez-Carrasco
Nicole Tamvaka
Ronald L Walton
Matthew C Baker
Hannah L Macpherson
Raquel Real
Alexandra I Soto-Beasley
Kin Mok
Tamas Revesz
Thomas T Warner
Zane Jaunmuktane
Bradley F Boeve
Elizabeth A Christopher
Michael DeTure
Ranjan Duara
Neill R Graff-Radford
Keith A Josephs
David S Knopman
Shunsuke Koga
Melissa E Murray
Kelly E Lyons
Rajesh Pahwa
Joseph E Parisi
Ronald C Petersen
Jennifer Whitwell
Lea T Grinberg
Bruce Miller
Athena Schlereth
William W Seeley
Salvatore Spina
Murray Grossman
David J Irwin
Edward B Lee
EunRan Suh
John Q Trojanowski
Vivianna M Van Deerlin
David A Wolk
Theresa R Connors
Patrick M Dooley
Matthew P Frosch
Derek H Oakley
Iban Aldecoa
Mircea Balasa
Ellen Gelpi
Sergi Borrego-Écija
Rosa Maria de Eugenio Huélamo
Jordi Gascon-Bayarri
Raquel Sánchez-Valle
Pilar Sanz-Cartagena
Gerard Piñol-Ripoll
Laura Molina-Porcel
Eileen H Bigio
Margaret E Flanagan
Tamar Gefen
Emily J Rogalski
Sandra Weintraub
Javier Redding-Ochoa
Koping Chang
Juan C Troncoso
Stefan Prokop
Kathy L Newell
Bernardino Ghetti
Matthew Jones
Anna Richardson
Andrew C Robinson
Federico Roncaroli
Julie Snowden
Kieren Allinson
Oliver Green
James B Rowe
Poonam Singh
Thomas G Beach
Geidy E Serrano
Xena E Flowers
James E Goldman
Allison C Heaps
Sandra P Leskinen
Andrew F Teich
Sandra E Black
Julia L Keith
Mario Masellis
Istvan Bodi
Andrew King
Safa-Al Sarraj
Claire Troakes
Glenda M Halliday
John R Hodges
Jillian J Kril
John B Kwok
Olivier Piguet
Marla Gearing
Thomas Arzberger
Sigrun Roeber
Johannes Attems
Christopher M Morris
Alan J Thomas
Bret M. Evers
Charles L White
Naguib Mechawar
Anne A Sieben
Patrick P Cras
Bart B De Vil
Peter Paul P.P. De Deyn
Charles Duyckaerts
Isabelle Le Ber
Danielle Seihean
Sabrina Turbant-Leclere
Ian R MacKenzie
Catriona McLean
Matthew D Cykowski
John F Ervin
Shih-Hsiu J Wang
Caroline Graff
Inger Nennesmo
Rashed M Nagra
James Riehl
Gabor G Kovacs
Giorgio Giaccone
Benedetta Nacmias
Manuela Neumann
Lee-Cyn Ang
Elizabeth C Finger
Cornelis Blauwendraat
Mike A Nalls
Andrew B Singleton
Dan Vitale
Cristina Cunha
Agostinho Carvalho
Zbigniew K Wszolek
Huw R Morris
Rosa Rademakers
John A Hardy
Dennis W Dickson
Jonathan D Rohrer
Owen A Ross
Source :
medRxiv
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2023.

Abstract

BackgroundPick’s disease (PiD) is a rare and predominantly sporadic form of frontotemporal dementia that is classified as a primary tauopathy. PiD is pathologically defined by argyrophilic inclusion Pick bodies and ballooned neurons in the frontal and temporal brain lobes. PiD is characterised by the presence of Pick bodies which are formed from aggregated, hyperphosphorylated, 3-repeat tau proteins, encoded by theMAPTgene. TheMAPTH2 haplotype has consistently been associated with a decreased disease risk of the 4-repeat tauopathies of progressive supranuclear palsy and corticobasal degeneration, however its role in susceptibility to PiD is unclear. The primary aim of this study was to evaluate the association betweenMAPTH2 and risk of PiD.MethodsWe established the Pick’s disease International Consortium (PIC) and collected 338 (60.7% male) pathologically confirmed PiD brains from 39 sites worldwide. 1,312 neurologically healthy clinical controls were recruited from Mayo Clinic Jacksonville, FL (N=881) or Rochester, MN (N=431). For the primary analysis, subjects were directly genotyped forMAPTH1-H2 haplotype-defining variant rs8070723. In secondary analysis, we genotyped and constructed the six-variantMAPTH1 subhaplotypes (rs1467967, rs242557, rs3785883, rs2471738, rs8070723, and rs7521).FindingsOur primary analysis found that theMAPTH2 haplotype was associated with increased risk of PiD (OR: 1.35, 95% CI: 1.12-1.64 P=0.002). In secondary analysis involving H1 subhaplotypes, a protective association with PiD was observed for the H1f haplotype (0.0% vs. 1.2%, P=0.049), with a similar trend noted for H1b (OR: 0.76, 95% CI: 0.58-1.00, P=0.051). The 4-repeat tauopathy risk haplotypeMAPTH1c was not associated with PiD susceptibility (OR: 0.93, 95% CI: 0.70-1.25, P=0.65).InterpretationThe PIC represents the first opportunity to perform relatively large-scale studies to enhance our understanding of the pathobiology of PiD. This study demonstrates that in contrast to its protective role in 4R tauopathies, theMAPTH2 haplotype is associated with an increased risk of PiD. This finding is critical in directing isoform-related therapeutics for tauopathies.FundingSee funding section

Subjects

Subjects :
Article

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
medRxiv
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8eb436da4c7362a38f76655e19fddf0a