4.6 Article

Sleep and Late-Onset Alzheimer's Disease: Shared Genetic Risk Factors, Drug Targets, Molecular Mechanisms, and Causal Effects

期刊

FRONTIERS IN GENETICS
卷 13, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2022.794202

关键词

sleep; late-onset Alzheimer's disease; common genetic etiology; genetic correlation; Mendelian randomization; transcriptome-wide association study

资金

  1. National Key Research and Development Project [2019YFC2003400]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Late-onset Alzheimer's disease (AD) is genetically related to sleep-related phenotypes, including insomnia, snoring, and sleep duration. Functional analysis and transcriptome-wide association study identified shared genes enriched in immune disorders and lipid metabolism pathways. Potential drug targets and molecular pathways were also identified for targeted treatment.
Late-onset Alzheimer's disease (AD) is associated with sleep-related phenotypes (SRPs). The fact that whether they share a common genetic etiology remains largely unknown. We explored the shared genetics and causality between AD and SRPs by using high-definition likelihood (HDL), cross-phenotype association study (CPASSOC), transcriptome-wide association study (TWAS), and bidirectional Mendelian randomization (MR) in summary-level data for AD (N = 455,258) and summary-level data for seven SRPs (sample size ranges from 359,916 to 1,331,010). AD shared a strong genetic basis with insomnia (r(g) = 0.20; p = 9.70 x 10(-5)), snoring (r(g) = 0.13; p = 2.45 x 10(-3)), and sleep duration (r(g) = -0.11; p = 1.18 x 10(-3)). The CPASSOC identifies 31 independent loci shared between AD and SRPs, including four novel shared loci. Functional analysis and the TWAS showed shared genes were enriched in liver, brain, breast, and heart tissues and highlighted the regulatory roles of immunological disorders, very-low-density lipoprotein particle clearance, triglyceride-rich lipoprotein particle clearance, chylomicron remnant clearance, and positive regulation of T-cell-mediated cytotoxicity pathways. Protein-protein interaction analysis identified three potential drug target genes (APOE, MARK4, and HLA-DRA) that interacted with known FDA-approved drug target genes. The CPASSOC and TWAS demonstrated three regions 11p11.2, 6p22.3, and 16p11.2 may account for the shared basis between AD and sleep duration or snoring. MR showed insomnia had a causal effect on AD (ORIVW = 1.02, P-IVW = 6.7 x 10(-6)), and multivariate MR suggested a potential role of sleep duration and major depression in this association. Our findings provide strong evidence of shared genetics and causation between AD and sleep abnormalities and advance our understanding of the genetic overlap between them. Identifying shared drug targets and molecular pathways can be beneficial for treating AD and sleep disorders more efficiently.

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