Excessive burden of lysosomal storage disorder gene variants in Parkinson’s disease
Author(s) -
Laurie Robak,
Iris E. Jansen,
Jeroen van Rooij,
André G. Uitterlinden,
Robert Kraaij,
Joseph Jankovic,
Peter Heutink,
Joshua Shulman,
Mike A. Nalls,
Vincent Plagnol,
Dena G Hernandez,
Manu Sharma,
UnaMarie Sheerin,
Mohamad Saad,
Javier SimónSánchez,
Claudia Schulte,
Suzanne Lesage,
Sigurlaug Sveinbjörnsdóttir,
Sampath Arepalli,
Roger A. Barker,
Yoav Ben-,
Henk W. Berendse,
Daniela Berg,
Kailash P. Bhatia,
Rob M.A. de Bie,
Alessandro Biffi,
Bas R. Bloem,
Zoltán Bochdanovits,
Michael Bonin,
José Brás,
Kathrin Brockmann,
Janet Brooks,
David J. Burn,
Elisa Majounie,
Gavin Charlesworth,
Codrin Lungu,
Honglei Chen,
Patrick F. Chinnery,
Sean Chong,
Carl E Clarke,
Mark Cookson,
Jonathan M. Cooper,
JeanChristophe Corvol,
Carl Counsell,
Philippe Damier,
JeanFrançois Dartigues,
Panos Deloukas,
Günther Deuschl,
David T. Dexter,
Karin D. van Dijk,
Allissa Dillman,
F. Durif,
Alexandra Dürr,
Sarah Edkins,
Jonathan Evans,
Thomas Foltynie,
Jing Dong,
Michelle Gardner,
J. Raphael Gibbs,
Alison Goate,
Emma Gray,
Rita Guerreiro,
Clare Harris,
Jacobus J. van Hilten,
Albert Hofman,
Albert R. Hollenbeck,
Janice L. Holton,
Isabel Wurster,
Walter Mätzler,
Gavin Hudson,
Sarah Hunt,
Johanna Huttenlocher,
Thomas Illig,
Pálmi V. Jónsson,
JeanCharles Lambert,
Cordelia Langford,
Andrew J. Lees,
Peter Lichtner,
Patricia Limousin,
Grisel Lopez,
Delia Lorenz,
Alisdair McNeill,
Catriona Moorby,
Matthew Moore,
Huw R. Morris,
Karen Morrison,
Valentina EscottPrice,
Ese Mudanohwo,
Sean S. O’Sullivan,
Justin Pearson,
Joel S. Perlmutter,
Hjörvar Pétursson,
Pierre Pollak,
Bart Post,
Simon Potter,
Bernard Ravina,
Tamás Révész,
Olaf Rieß,
Fernando Rivadeneira,
Patrizia Rizzu,
Mina Ryten,
Stephen Sawcer,
Anthony H.V. Schapira,
Hans Scheffer,
Karen Shaw,
Ira Shoulson,
Ellen Sidransky,
Colin Smith,
Chris C. A. Spencer,
Hreinn Stefánsson,
Francesco Bettella,
Joanna D. Stockton,
Amy Strange,
Kevin Talbot,
Carlie M. Tanner,
Avazeh Tashakkori-Ghanbaria,
François Tison,
Daniah Trabzuni,
Bryan J. Traynor,
Daan C. Velseboer,
Marie Vidailhet,
Robert Walker,
Bart van de Warrenburg,
Mirdhu Wickremaratchi,
Nigel Williams,
Caroline H. WilliamsGray,
Sophie WinderRhodes,
Kári Stéfansson,
María Martínez,
Nicholas Wood,
John Hardy,
Alexis Brice,
Thomas Gasser,
Andrew Singleton
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
brain
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.142
H-Index - 336
eISSN - 1460-2156
pISSN - 0006-8950
DOI - 10.1093/brain/awx285
Subject(s) - glucocerebrosidase , exome sequencing , disease , biology , genetics , parkinson's disease , candidate gene , lysosomal storage disease , lrrk2 , exome , gene , bioinformatics , medicine , mutation , pathology
Mutations in the glucocerebrosidase gene (GBA), which cause Gaucher disease, are also potent risk factors for Parkinson's disease. We examined whether a genetic burden of variants in other lysosomal storage disorder genes is more broadly associated with Parkinson's disease susceptibility. The sequence kernel association test was used to interrogate variant burden among 54 lysosomal storage disorder genes, leveraging whole exome sequencing data from 1156 Parkinson's disease cases and 1679 control subjects. We discovered a significant burden of rare, likely damaging lysosomal storage disorder gene variants in association with Parkinson's disease risk. The association signal was robust to the exclusion of GBA, and consistent results were obtained in two independent replication cohorts, including 436 cases and 169 controls with whole exome sequencing and an additional 6713 cases and 5964 controls with exome-wide genotyping. In secondary analyses designed to highlight the specific genes driving the aggregate signal, we confirmed associations at the GBA and SMPD1 loci and newly implicate CTSD, SLC17A5, and ASAH1 as candidate Parkinson's disease susceptibility genes. In our discovery cohort, the majority of Parkinson's disease cases (56%) have at least one putative damaging variant in a lysosomal storage disorder gene, and 21% carry multiple alleles. Our results highlight several promising new susceptibility loci and reinforce the importance of lysosomal mechanisms in Parkinson's disease pathogenesis. We suggest that multiple genetic hits may act in combination to degrade lysosomal function, enhancing Parkinson's disease susceptibility.
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