NO CONSISTENT EVIDENCE FOR ASSOCIATION BETWEEN mtDNA VARIANTS AND ALZHEIMER DISEASE

Objective: Although several studies have described an association between Alzheimer disease (AD) and genetic variation of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), each has implicated different mtDNA variants, so the role of mtDNA in the etiology of AD remains uncertain. Methods: We tested 138 mtDNA variants for a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neurology 2012-04, Vol.78 (15), p.1038-1042
Hauptverfasser: Hudson, G, Sims, R, Harold, D, Chapman, J, Hollingworth, P, Gerrish, A, Russo, G, Hamshere, M, Moskvina, V, Jones, N, Thomas, C, Stretton, A, Holmans, P A, O'Donovan, M C
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container_end_page 1042
container_issue 15
container_start_page 1038
container_title Neurology
container_volume 78
creator Hudson, G
Sims, R
Harold, D
Chapman, J
Hollingworth, P
Gerrish, A
Russo, G
Hamshere, M
Moskvina, V
Jones, N
Thomas, C
Stretton, A
Holmans, P A
O'Donovan, M C
description Objective: Although several studies have described an association between Alzheimer disease (AD) and genetic variation of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), each has implicated different mtDNA variants, so the role of mtDNA in the etiology of AD remains uncertain. Methods: We tested 138 mtDNA variants for association with AD in a powerful sample of 4,133 AD case patients and 1,602 matched controls from 3 Caucasian populations. Of the total population, 3,250 case patients and 1,221 elderly controls met the quality control criteria and were included in the analysis. Results: In the largest study to date, we failed to replicate the published findings. Meta-analysis of the available data showed no evidence of an association with AD. Conclusion: The current evidence linking common mtDNA variations with AD is not compelling.
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source Journals@Ovid Ovid Autoload; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Alzheimer's disease
Data processing
Etiology
Genetic diversity
Geriatrics
Mitochondrial DNA
Neurodegenerative diseases
Nitric oxide
Quality control
Reviews
title NO CONSISTENT EVIDENCE FOR ASSOCIATION BETWEEN mtDNA VARIANTS AND ALZHEIMER DISEASE
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