Investigation of 15 of the top candidate genes for late-onset Alzheimer's disease Olivia BelbinMinerva M. CarrasquilloMichael CrumpOliver J. CulleyTalisha A. Hunter • Li MaGina BisceglioFanggeng ZouMariet AllenDennis W. DicksonNeill R. Graff-Radford • Ronald C. PetersenKevin MorganSteven G. Younkin
2011
The 12 genome-wide association studies (GWAS) published to-date for late-onset Alzheimer's dis- ease (LOAD) have identified over 40 candidate LOAD risk modifiers, in addition to apolipoprotein (APOE) e4. A few of these novel LOAD candidate genes, namely BIN1, CLU, CR1, EXOC3L2 and PICALM, have shown consistent rep- lication, and are thus credible LOAD susceptibility genes. To evaluate other promising LOAD candidate genes, we have added data from our large, case-control series (n = 5,043) to meta-analyses of all published follow-up case-control association studies for six LOAD candidate genes that have shown significant association across multiple studies (TNK1, GAB2, LOC651924, GWA_14q32.13, PGBD1 and GALP) and for an additional nine previously suggested candidate genes. Meta-analyses remained significant at three loci after addition of our data: GAB2 (OR = 0.78, p = 0.007), LOC651924 (OR = 0.91, p = 0.01) and TNK1 (OR = 0.92, p = 0.02). Breslow-Day tests revealed significant hetero- geneity between studies for GAB2 (p \ 0.0001) and GWA_14q32.13 (p = 0.006). We have also provided sug- gestive evidence that PGBD1 (p = 0.04) and EBF3 (p = 0.03) are associated with age-at-onset of LOAD. Finally, we tested for interactions between these 15 genes, APOE e4 and the five novel LOAD genes BIN1, CLU, CR1, EXOC3L2 and PICALM but none were significant after correction for multiple testing. Overall, this large, indepen- dent follow-up study for 15 of the top LOAD candidate genes provides support for GAB2 and LOC651924 (6q24.1 )a s risk modifiers of LOAD and novel associations between PGBD1 and EBF3 with age-at-onset.
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