African locus reduces the effect of ApoE ε4 allele in Alzheimer’s disease
Background Strong associations between ApoE ε4 and Alzheimer disease (AD) risk have been confirmed worldwide, but there is variability in the effect size across populations. African (AF)‐descent populations have a lower risk from ApoE ε4 compared to other populations. Studies in admixed populations...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Alzheimer's & dementia 2021-12, Vol.17, p.e056210-n/a |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background
Strong associations between ApoE ε4 and Alzheimer disease (AD) risk have been confirmed worldwide, but there is variability in the effect size across populations. African (AF)‐descent populations have a lower risk from ApoE ε4 compared to other populations. Studies in admixed populations showed that the AF ancestral background surrounding the ApoE gene reduces the ε4 risk allele effect. Our aim in this study is to identify genetic loci that show a protective effect in AF ancestral background.
Method
Primary analyses included imputed data from 6,417 African American (AA) individuals (Kunkle et al. 2020). We estimated global ancestry using a PC‐AiR approach that is robust to known and cryptic relatedness. To identify any protective factors interacting with ApoE in the AF local ancestry region, we performed association analyses using a logistic regression model with ApoE ε4 allele as an interaction term and adjusted for genome‐wide ancestry, age, and sex. We performed replication analysis using Whole Genome Sequence (WGS) data on 837 African LA ancestry individuals from Ibadan/Nigeria.
Result
We identified a locus (rs10423769) that lies within a large cluster of pregnancy specific beta‐1 glycoproteins on chromosome 19, ∼ 2 mB from ApoE, with a significant interaction with the ApoE ε4 allele (β=‐0.53; SE=0.12;p‐value=1.2x10‐5; FDR adjusted p‐value |
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ISSN: | 1552-5260 1552-5279 |
DOI: | 10.1002/alz.056210 |