4.6 Article

Genome-Wide Association of Familial Late-Onset Alzheimer's Disease Replicates BIN1 and CLU and Nominates CUGBP2 in Interaction with APOE

Journal

PLOS GENETICS
Volume 7, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1001308

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. National Institute of Aging [U24AG026395]
  2. National Cell Repository for Alzheimer's Disease [U24AG021886]
  3. University of Pittsburgh [R01AG027224, P50AG005133]
  4. Rush University Medical Center [P30AG10161]
  5. Boston University [P30AG013846]
  6. Columbia University [P50AG08702, P01AG07232, R37AG015473]
  7. Duke University [P30AG028377, P50AG05128]
  8. Indiana University [P30AG010133]
  9. Massachusetts General Hospital [P50AG05134]
  10. Mayo Clinic, Rochester, and Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville [P50AG165574]
  11. Mount Sinai School of Medicine [P01AG05138, P01AG02219, P50AG05138]
  12. Northwestern University Medical School [P30AG13854]
  13. Oregon Health and Science University [P30AG008017]
  14. University of Alabama at Birmingham [P50AG016582]
  15. David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California Los Angeles [P50AG016579]
  16. University of Kentucky, Lexington [P30AG028383]
  17. University of Pennsylvania [P30AG10124]
  18. University of Southern California [P50AG05142]
  19. University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center [P30AG12300]
  20. University of Washington [P50AG05136]
  21. Washington University School of Medicine [P50AG05681, P01AG03991]
  22. National Institutes of Health [HHSN268200782096C]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Late-onset Alzheimer's disease (LOAD) is the most common form of dementia in the elderly. The National Institute of Aging-Late Onset Alzheimer's Disease Family Study and the National Cell Repository for Alzheimer's Disease conducted a joint genome-wide association study (GWAS) of multiplex LOAD families (3,839 affected and unaffected individuals from 992 families plus additional unrelated neurologically evaluated normal subjects) using the 610 IlluminaQuad panel. This cohort represents the largest family-based GWAS of LOAD to date, with analyses limited here to the European-American subjects. SNPs near APOE gave highly significant results (e. g., rs2075650, p = 3.2 x 10(-81)), but no other genome-wide significant evidence for association was obtained in the full sample. Analyses that stratified on APOE genotypes identified SNPs on chromosome 10p14 in CUGBP2 with genome-wide significant evidence for association within APOE epsilon 4 homozygotes (e.g., rs201119, p = 1.5 x 10(-8)). Association in this gene was replicated in an independent sample consisting of three cohorts. There was evidence of association for recently-reported LOAD risk loci, including BIN1 (rs7561528, p = 0.009 with, and p = 0.03 without, APOE adjustment) and CLU (rs11136000, p = 0.023 with, and p = 0.008 without, APOE adjustment), with weaker support for CR1. However, our results provide strong evidence that association with PICALM (rs3851179, p = 0.69 with, and p = 0.039 without, APOE adjustment) and EXOC3L2 is affected by correlation with APOE, and thus may represent spurious association. Our results indicate that genetic structure coupled with ascertainment bias resulting from the strong APOE association affect genome-wide results and interpretation of some recently reported associations. We show that a locus such as APOE, with large effects and strong association with disease, can lead to samples that require appropriate adjustment for this locus to avoid both false positive and false negative evidence of association. We suggest that similar adjustments may also be needed for many other large multi-site studies.

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