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Παρασκευή 22 Σεπτεμβρίου 2017

Contribution to Alzheimer's disease risk of rare variants in TREM2, SORL1, and ABCA7 in 1779 cases and 1273 controls

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Publication date: November 2017
Source:Neurobiology of Aging, Volume 59
Author(s): Céline Bellenguez, Camille Charbonnier, Benjamin Grenier-Boley, Olivier Quenez, Kilan Le Guennec, Gaël Nicolas, Ganesh Chauhan, David Wallon, Stéphane Rousseau, Anne Claire Richard, Anne Boland, Guillaume Bourque, Hans Markus Munter, Robert Olaso, Vincent Meyer, Adeline Rollin-Sillaire, Florence Pasquier, Luc Letenneur, Richard Redon, Jean-François Dartigues, Christophe Tzourio, Thierry Frebourg, Mark Lathrop, Jean-François Deleuze, Didier Hannequin, Emmanuelle Genin, Philippe Amouyel, Stéphanie Debette, Jean-Charles Lambert, Dominique Campion
We performed whole-exome and whole-genome sequencing in 927 late-onset Alzheimer disease (LOAD) cases, 852 early-onset AD (EOAD) cases, and 1273 controls from France. We assessed the evidence for gene-based association of rare variants with AD in 6 genes for which an association with such variants was previously claimed. When aggregating protein-truncating and missense-predicted damaging variants, we found exome-wide significant association between EOAD risk and rare variants in SORL1, TREM2, and ABCA7. No exome-wide significant signal was obtained in the LOAD sample, and significance of the order of 10−6 was observed in the whole AD group for TREM2. Our study confirms previous gene-level results for TREM2, SORL1, and ABCA7 and provides a clearer insight into the classes of rare variants involved. Despite different effect sizes and varying cumulative minor allele frequencies, the rare protein-truncating and missense-predicted damaging variants in TREM2, SORL1, and ABCA7 contribute similarly to the heritability of EOAD and explain between 1.1% and 1.5% of EOAD heritability each, compared with 9.12% for APOE ε4.



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