4.6 Article

Genetic Insights into the Impact of Complement in Alzheimer's Disease

Journal

GENES
Volume 12, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/genes12121990

Keywords

complement; complement receptor 1; clusterin; late-onset Alzheimer's disease; genetics; neuroinflammation

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The pivotal role of complement activation in AD has been well studied, with genetic variations contributing significant effects on the disease. While several complement genes have been identified in association with AD, the complexity of the complement pathway poses challenges in attributing their role in disease mechanisms.
The presence of complement activation products at sites of pathology in post-mortem Alzheimer's disease (AD) brains is well known. Recent evidence from genome-wide association studies (GWAS), combined with the demonstration that complement activation is pivotal in synapse loss in AD, strongly implicates complement in disease aetiology. Genetic variations in complement genes are widespread. While most variants individually have only minor effects on complement homeostasis, the combined effects of variants in multiple complement genes, referred to as the complotype, can have major effects. In some diseases, the complotype highlights specific parts of the complement pathway involved in disease, thereby pointing towards a mechanism; however, this is not the case with AD. Here we review the complement GWAS hits; CR1 encoding complement receptor 1 (CR1), CLU encoding clusterin, and a suggestive association of C1S encoding the enzyme C1s, and discuss difficulties in attributing the AD association in these genes to complement function. A better understanding of complement genetics in AD might facilitate predictive genetic screening tests and enable the development of simple diagnostic tools and guide the future use of anti-complement drugs, of which several are currently in development for central nervous system disorders.

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