Cargando…

Founder population-specific weights yield improvements in performance of polygenic risk scores for Alzheimer disease in the Midwestern Amish

Alzheimer disease (AD) is the most common type of dementia and is estimated to affect 6 million Americans. Risk for AD is multifactorial, including both genetic and environmental risk factors. AD genomic research has generally focused on identification of risk variants. Using this information, polyg...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Osterman, Michael D., Song, Yeunjoo E., Lynn, Audrey, Miskimen, Kristy, Adams, Larry D., Laux, Renee A., Caywood, Laura J., Prough, Michael B., Clouse, Jason E., Herington, Sharlene D., Slifer, Susan H., Fuzzell, Sarada L., Hochstetler, Sherri D., Main, Leighanne R., Dorfsman, Daniel A., Zaman, Andrew F., Ogrocki, Paula, Lerner, Alan J., Vance, Jeffery M., Cuccaro, Michael L., Scott, William K., Pericak-Vance, Margaret A., Haines, Jonathan L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10565871/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37742071
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.xhgg.2023.100241
_version_ 1785118790106742784
author Osterman, Michael D.
Song, Yeunjoo E.
Lynn, Audrey
Miskimen, Kristy
Adams, Larry D.
Laux, Renee A.
Caywood, Laura J.
Prough, Michael B.
Clouse, Jason E.
Herington, Sharlene D.
Slifer, Susan H.
Fuzzell, Sarada L.
Hochstetler, Sherri D.
Main, Leighanne R.
Dorfsman, Daniel A.
Zaman, Andrew F.
Ogrocki, Paula
Lerner, Alan J.
Vance, Jeffery M.
Cuccaro, Michael L.
Scott, William K.
Pericak-Vance, Margaret A.
Haines, Jonathan L.
author_facet Osterman, Michael D.
Song, Yeunjoo E.
Lynn, Audrey
Miskimen, Kristy
Adams, Larry D.
Laux, Renee A.
Caywood, Laura J.
Prough, Michael B.
Clouse, Jason E.
Herington, Sharlene D.
Slifer, Susan H.
Fuzzell, Sarada L.
Hochstetler, Sherri D.
Main, Leighanne R.
Dorfsman, Daniel A.
Zaman, Andrew F.
Ogrocki, Paula
Lerner, Alan J.
Vance, Jeffery M.
Cuccaro, Michael L.
Scott, William K.
Pericak-Vance, Margaret A.
Haines, Jonathan L.
author_sort Osterman, Michael D.
collection PubMed
description Alzheimer disease (AD) is the most common type of dementia and is estimated to affect 6 million Americans. Risk for AD is multifactorial, including both genetic and environmental risk factors. AD genomic research has generally focused on identification of risk variants. Using this information, polygenic risk scores (PRSs) can be calculated to quantify an individual’s relative disease risk due to genetic factors. The Amish are a founder population descended from German and Swiss Anabaptist immigrants. They experienced a genetic bottleneck after arrival in the United States, making their genetic architecture different from the broader European ancestry population. Prior work has demonstrated the lack of transferability of PRSs across populations. Here, we compared the performance of PRSs derived from genome-wide association studies (GWASs) of Amish individuals to those derived from a large European ancestry GWAS. Participants were screened for cognitive impairment with further evaluation for AD. Genotype data were imputed after collection via Illumina genotyping arrays. The Amish individuals were split into two groups based on the primary site of recruitment. For each group, GWAS was conducted with account for relatedness and adjustment for covariates. PRSs were then calculated using weights from the other Amish group. PRS models were evaluated with and without covariates. The Amish-derived PRSs distinguished between dementia status better than the European-derived PRS in our Amish populations and demonstrated performance improvements despite a smaller training sample size. This work highlighted considerations for AD PRS usage in populations that cannot be adequately described by basic race/ethnicity or ancestry classifications.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10565871
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher Elsevier
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-105658712023-10-12 Founder population-specific weights yield improvements in performance of polygenic risk scores for Alzheimer disease in the Midwestern Amish Osterman, Michael D. Song, Yeunjoo E. Lynn, Audrey Miskimen, Kristy Adams, Larry D. Laux, Renee A. Caywood, Laura J. Prough, Michael B. Clouse, Jason E. Herington, Sharlene D. Slifer, Susan H. Fuzzell, Sarada L. Hochstetler, Sherri D. Main, Leighanne R. Dorfsman, Daniel A. Zaman, Andrew F. Ogrocki, Paula Lerner, Alan J. Vance, Jeffery M. Cuccaro, Michael L. Scott, William K. Pericak-Vance, Margaret A. Haines, Jonathan L. HGG Adv Article Alzheimer disease (AD) is the most common type of dementia and is estimated to affect 6 million Americans. Risk for AD is multifactorial, including both genetic and environmental risk factors. AD genomic research has generally focused on identification of risk variants. Using this information, polygenic risk scores (PRSs) can be calculated to quantify an individual’s relative disease risk due to genetic factors. The Amish are a founder population descended from German and Swiss Anabaptist immigrants. They experienced a genetic bottleneck after arrival in the United States, making their genetic architecture different from the broader European ancestry population. Prior work has demonstrated the lack of transferability of PRSs across populations. Here, we compared the performance of PRSs derived from genome-wide association studies (GWASs) of Amish individuals to those derived from a large European ancestry GWAS. Participants were screened for cognitive impairment with further evaluation for AD. Genotype data were imputed after collection via Illumina genotyping arrays. The Amish individuals were split into two groups based on the primary site of recruitment. For each group, GWAS was conducted with account for relatedness and adjustment for covariates. PRSs were then calculated using weights from the other Amish group. PRS models were evaluated with and without covariates. The Amish-derived PRSs distinguished between dementia status better than the European-derived PRS in our Amish populations and demonstrated performance improvements despite a smaller training sample size. This work highlighted considerations for AD PRS usage in populations that cannot be adequately described by basic race/ethnicity or ancestry classifications. Elsevier 2023-09-22 /pmc/articles/PMC10565871/ /pubmed/37742071 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.xhgg.2023.100241 Text en © 2023 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Osterman, Michael D.
Song, Yeunjoo E.
Lynn, Audrey
Miskimen, Kristy
Adams, Larry D.
Laux, Renee A.
Caywood, Laura J.
Prough, Michael B.
Clouse, Jason E.
Herington, Sharlene D.
Slifer, Susan H.
Fuzzell, Sarada L.
Hochstetler, Sherri D.
Main, Leighanne R.
Dorfsman, Daniel A.
Zaman, Andrew F.
Ogrocki, Paula
Lerner, Alan J.
Vance, Jeffery M.
Cuccaro, Michael L.
Scott, William K.
Pericak-Vance, Margaret A.
Haines, Jonathan L.
Founder population-specific weights yield improvements in performance of polygenic risk scores for Alzheimer disease in the Midwestern Amish
title Founder population-specific weights yield improvements in performance of polygenic risk scores for Alzheimer disease in the Midwestern Amish
title_full Founder population-specific weights yield improvements in performance of polygenic risk scores for Alzheimer disease in the Midwestern Amish
title_fullStr Founder population-specific weights yield improvements in performance of polygenic risk scores for Alzheimer disease in the Midwestern Amish
title_full_unstemmed Founder population-specific weights yield improvements in performance of polygenic risk scores for Alzheimer disease in the Midwestern Amish
title_short Founder population-specific weights yield improvements in performance of polygenic risk scores for Alzheimer disease in the Midwestern Amish
title_sort founder population-specific weights yield improvements in performance of polygenic risk scores for alzheimer disease in the midwestern amish
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10565871/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37742071
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.xhgg.2023.100241
work_keys_str_mv AT ostermanmichaeld founderpopulationspecificweightsyieldimprovementsinperformanceofpolygenicriskscoresforalzheimerdiseaseinthemidwesternamish
AT songyeunjooe founderpopulationspecificweightsyieldimprovementsinperformanceofpolygenicriskscoresforalzheimerdiseaseinthemidwesternamish
AT lynnaudrey founderpopulationspecificweightsyieldimprovementsinperformanceofpolygenicriskscoresforalzheimerdiseaseinthemidwesternamish
AT miskimenkristy founderpopulationspecificweightsyieldimprovementsinperformanceofpolygenicriskscoresforalzheimerdiseaseinthemidwesternamish
AT adamslarryd founderpopulationspecificweightsyieldimprovementsinperformanceofpolygenicriskscoresforalzheimerdiseaseinthemidwesternamish
AT lauxreneea founderpopulationspecificweightsyieldimprovementsinperformanceofpolygenicriskscoresforalzheimerdiseaseinthemidwesternamish
AT caywoodlauraj founderpopulationspecificweightsyieldimprovementsinperformanceofpolygenicriskscoresforalzheimerdiseaseinthemidwesternamish
AT proughmichaelb founderpopulationspecificweightsyieldimprovementsinperformanceofpolygenicriskscoresforalzheimerdiseaseinthemidwesternamish
AT clousejasone founderpopulationspecificweightsyieldimprovementsinperformanceofpolygenicriskscoresforalzheimerdiseaseinthemidwesternamish
AT heringtonsharlened founderpopulationspecificweightsyieldimprovementsinperformanceofpolygenicriskscoresforalzheimerdiseaseinthemidwesternamish
AT slifersusanh founderpopulationspecificweightsyieldimprovementsinperformanceofpolygenicriskscoresforalzheimerdiseaseinthemidwesternamish
AT fuzzellsaradal founderpopulationspecificweightsyieldimprovementsinperformanceofpolygenicriskscoresforalzheimerdiseaseinthemidwesternamish
AT hochstetlersherrid founderpopulationspecificweightsyieldimprovementsinperformanceofpolygenicriskscoresforalzheimerdiseaseinthemidwesternamish
AT mainleighanner founderpopulationspecificweightsyieldimprovementsinperformanceofpolygenicriskscoresforalzheimerdiseaseinthemidwesternamish
AT dorfsmandaniela founderpopulationspecificweightsyieldimprovementsinperformanceofpolygenicriskscoresforalzheimerdiseaseinthemidwesternamish
AT zamanandrewf founderpopulationspecificweightsyieldimprovementsinperformanceofpolygenicriskscoresforalzheimerdiseaseinthemidwesternamish
AT ogrockipaula founderpopulationspecificweightsyieldimprovementsinperformanceofpolygenicriskscoresforalzheimerdiseaseinthemidwesternamish
AT lerneralanj founderpopulationspecificweightsyieldimprovementsinperformanceofpolygenicriskscoresforalzheimerdiseaseinthemidwesternamish
AT vancejefferym founderpopulationspecificweightsyieldimprovementsinperformanceofpolygenicriskscoresforalzheimerdiseaseinthemidwesternamish
AT cuccaromichaell founderpopulationspecificweightsyieldimprovementsinperformanceofpolygenicriskscoresforalzheimerdiseaseinthemidwesternamish
AT scottwilliamk founderpopulationspecificweightsyieldimprovementsinperformanceofpolygenicriskscoresforalzheimerdiseaseinthemidwesternamish
AT pericakvancemargareta founderpopulationspecificweightsyieldimprovementsinperformanceofpolygenicriskscoresforalzheimerdiseaseinthemidwesternamish
AT hainesjonathanl founderpopulationspecificweightsyieldimprovementsinperformanceofpolygenicriskscoresforalzheimerdiseaseinthemidwesternamish