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Whole-exome sequencing in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis suggests NEK1 is a risk gene in Chinese

Authors :
Jacob Gratten
Qiongyi Zhao
Beben Benyamin
Fleur Garton
Ji He
Paul J. Leo
Marie Mangelsdorf
Lisa Anderson
Zong-Hong Zhang
Lu Chen
Xiang-Ding Chen
Katie Cremin
Hong-Weng Deng
Janette Edson
Ying-Ying Han
Jessica Harris
Anjali K. Henders
Zi-Bing Jin
Zhongshan Li
Yong Lin
Xiaolu Liu
Mhairi Marshall
Bryan J. Mowry
Shu Ran
David C. Reutens
Sharon Song
Li-Jun Tan
Lu Tang
Robyn H. Wallace
Lawrie Wheeler
Jinyu Wu
Jian Yang
Huji Xu
Peter M. Visscher
Perry F. Bartlett
Matthew A. Brown
Naomi R. Wray
Dongsheng Fan
Source :
Genome Medicine, Vol 9, Iss 1, Pp 1-9 (2017)
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
BMC, 2017.

Abstract

Abstract Background Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a progressive neurological disease characterised by the degeneration of motor neurons, which are responsible for voluntary movement. There remains limited understanding of disease aetiology, with median survival of ALS of three years and no effective treatment. Identifying genes that contribute to ALS susceptibility is an important step towards understanding aetiology. The vast majority of published human genetic studies, including for ALS, have used samples of European ancestry. The importance of trans-ethnic studies in human genetic studies is widely recognised, yet a dearth of studies of non-European ancestries remains. Here, we report analyses of novel whole-exome sequencing (WES) data from Chinese ALS and control individuals. Methods WES data were generated for 610 ALS cases and 460 controls drawn from Chinese populations. We assessed evidence for an excess of rare damaging mutations at the gene level and the gene set level, considering only singleton variants filtered to have allele frequency less than 5 × 10–5 in reference databases. To meta-analyse our results with a published study of European ancestry, we used a Cochran–Mantel–Haenszel test to compare gene-level variant counts in cases vs controls. Results No gene passed the genome-wide significance threshold with ALS in Chinese samples alone. Combining rare variant counts in Chinese with those from the largest WES study of European ancestry resulted in three genes surpassing genome-wide significance: TBK1 (p = 8.3 × 10–12), SOD1 (p = 8.9 × 10–9) and NEK1 (p = 1.1 × 10–9). In the Chinese data alone, SOD1 and NEK1 were nominally significantly associated with ALS (p = 0.04 and p = 7 × 10–3, respectively) and the case/control frequencies of rare coding variants in these genes were similar in Chinese and Europeans (SOD1: 1.5%/0.2% vs 0.9%/0.1%, NEK1 1.8%/0.4% vs 1.9%/0.8%). This was also true for TBK1 (1.2%/0.2% vs 1.4%/0.4%), but the association with ALS in Chinese was not significant (p = 0.14). Conclusions While SOD1 is already recognised as an ALS-associated gene in Chinese, we provide novel evidence for association of NEK1 with ALS in Chinese, reporting variants in these genes not previously found in Europeans.

Subjects

Subjects :
Medicine
Genetics
QH426-470

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1756994X
Volume :
9
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Genome Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.98e8341b26c046c8b5ac3b8ba4dc00bc
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13073-017-0487-0