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Examination of Candidate Exonic Variants for Association to Alzheimer Disease in the Amish
Author(s) -
Laura D’Aoust,
Anna Cummings,
Reneé Laux,
Denise Fuzzell,
Laura J. Caywood,
Lori ReinhartMercer,
William K. Scott,
Margaret A. PericakVance,
Jonathan L. Haines
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0118043
Subject(s) - genetics , biology , genetic association , exome , genotyping , exome sequencing , genome wide association study , founder effect , candidate gene , disease , missing heritability problem , population , allele , dementia , single nucleotide polymorphism , gene , genotype , medicine , haplotype , mutation , pathology , environmental health
Alzheimer disease (AD) is the most common cause of dementia. As with many complex diseases, the identified variants do not explain the total expected genetic risk that is based on heritability estimates for AD. Isolated founder populations, such as the Amish, are advantageous for genetic studies as they overcome heterogeneity limitations associated with complex population studies. We determined that Amish AD cases harbored a significantly higher burden of the known risk alleles compared to Amish cognitively normal controls, but a significantly lower burden when compared to cases from a dataset of unrelated individuals. Whole-exome sequencing of a selected subset of the overall study population was used as a screening tool to identify variants located in the regions of the genome that are most likely to contribute risk. By then genotyping the top candidate variants from the known AD genes and from linkage regions implicated previous studies in the full dataset, new associations could be confirmed. The most significant result (p = 0.0012) was for rs73938538 , a synonymous variant in LAMA1 within the previously identified linkage peak on chromosome 18. However, this association is specific to the Amish and did not generalize when tested in a dataset of unrelated individuals. These results suggest that additional risk variation in the Amish remains to be identified and likely resides outside of the classical protein coding gene regions.

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