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Genome-Wide association study identifies candidate genes for Parkinson's disease in an Ashkenazi Jewish population

BACKGROUND: To date, nine Parkinson disease (PD) genome-wide association studies in North American, European and Asian populations have been published. The majority of studies have confirmed the association of the previously identified genetic risk factors, SNCA and MAPT, and two studies have identi...

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Autores principales: Liu, Xinmin, Cheng, Rong, Verbitsky, Miguel, Kisselev, Sergey, Browne, Andrew, Mejia-Sanatana, Helen, Louis, Elan D, Cote, Lucien J, Andrews, Howard, Waters, Cheryl, Ford, Blair, Frucht, Steven, Fahn, Stanley, Marder, Karen, Clark, Lorraine N, Lee, Joseph H
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3166909/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21812969
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2350-12-104
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author Liu, Xinmin
Cheng, Rong
Verbitsky, Miguel
Kisselev, Sergey
Browne, Andrew
Mejia-Sanatana, Helen
Louis, Elan D
Cote, Lucien J
Andrews, Howard
Waters, Cheryl
Ford, Blair
Frucht, Steven
Fahn, Stanley
Marder, Karen
Clark, Lorraine N
Lee, Joseph H
author_facet Liu, Xinmin
Cheng, Rong
Verbitsky, Miguel
Kisselev, Sergey
Browne, Andrew
Mejia-Sanatana, Helen
Louis, Elan D
Cote, Lucien J
Andrews, Howard
Waters, Cheryl
Ford, Blair
Frucht, Steven
Fahn, Stanley
Marder, Karen
Clark, Lorraine N
Lee, Joseph H
author_sort Liu, Xinmin
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: To date, nine Parkinson disease (PD) genome-wide association studies in North American, European and Asian populations have been published. The majority of studies have confirmed the association of the previously identified genetic risk factors, SNCA and MAPT, and two studies have identified three new PD susceptibility loci/genes (PARK16, BST1 and HLA-DRB5). In a recent meta-analysis of datasets from five of the published PD GWAS an additional 6 novel candidate genes (SYT11, ACMSD, STK39, MCCC1/LAMP3, GAK and CCDC62/HIP1R) were identified. Collectively the associations identified in these GWAS account for only a small proportion of the estimated total heritability of PD suggesting that an 'unknown' component of the genetic architecture of PD remains to be identified. METHODS: We applied a GWAS approach to a relatively homogeneous Ashkenazi Jewish (AJ) population from New York to search for both 'rare' and 'common' genetic variants that confer risk of PD by examining any SNPs with allele frequencies exceeding 2%. We have focused on a genetic isolate, the AJ population, as a discovery dataset since this cohort has a higher sharing of genetic background and historically experienced a significant bottleneck. We also conducted a replication study using two publicly available datasets from dbGaP. The joint analysis dataset had a combined sample size of 2,050 cases and 1,836 controls. RESULTS: We identified the top 57 SNPs showing the strongest evidence of association in the AJ dataset (p < 9.9 × 10(-5)). Six SNPs located within gene regions had positive signals in at least one other independent dbGaP dataset: LOC100505836 (Chr3p24), LOC153328/SLC25A48 (Chr5q31.1), UNC13B (9p13.3), SLCO3A1(15q26.1), WNT3(17q21.3) and NSF (17q21.3). We also replicated published associations for the gene regions SNCA (Chr4q21; rs3775442, p = 0.037), PARK16 (Chr1q32.1; rs823114 (NUCKS1), p = 6.12 × 10(-4)), BST1 (Chr4p15; rs12502586, p = 0.027), STK39 (Chr2q24.3; rs3754775, p = 0.005), and LAMP3 (Chr3; rs12493050, p = 0.005) in addition to the two most common PD susceptibility genes in the AJ population LRRK2 (Chr12q12; rs34637584, p = 1.56 × 10(-4)) and GBA (Chr1q21; rs2990245, p = 0.015). CONCLUSIONS: We have demonstrated the utility of the AJ dataset in PD candidate gene and SNP discovery both by replication in dbGaP datasets with a larger sample size and by replicating association of previously identified PD susceptibility genes. Our GWAS study has identified candidate gene regions for PD that are implicated in neuronal signalling and the dopamine pathway.
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spelling pubmed-31669092011-09-06 Genome-Wide association study identifies candidate genes for Parkinson's disease in an Ashkenazi Jewish population Liu, Xinmin Cheng, Rong Verbitsky, Miguel Kisselev, Sergey Browne, Andrew Mejia-Sanatana, Helen Louis, Elan D Cote, Lucien J Andrews, Howard Waters, Cheryl Ford, Blair Frucht, Steven Fahn, Stanley Marder, Karen Clark, Lorraine N Lee, Joseph H BMC Med Genet Research Article BACKGROUND: To date, nine Parkinson disease (PD) genome-wide association studies in North American, European and Asian populations have been published. The majority of studies have confirmed the association of the previously identified genetic risk factors, SNCA and MAPT, and two studies have identified three new PD susceptibility loci/genes (PARK16, BST1 and HLA-DRB5). In a recent meta-analysis of datasets from five of the published PD GWAS an additional 6 novel candidate genes (SYT11, ACMSD, STK39, MCCC1/LAMP3, GAK and CCDC62/HIP1R) were identified. Collectively the associations identified in these GWAS account for only a small proportion of the estimated total heritability of PD suggesting that an 'unknown' component of the genetic architecture of PD remains to be identified. METHODS: We applied a GWAS approach to a relatively homogeneous Ashkenazi Jewish (AJ) population from New York to search for both 'rare' and 'common' genetic variants that confer risk of PD by examining any SNPs with allele frequencies exceeding 2%. We have focused on a genetic isolate, the AJ population, as a discovery dataset since this cohort has a higher sharing of genetic background and historically experienced a significant bottleneck. We also conducted a replication study using two publicly available datasets from dbGaP. The joint analysis dataset had a combined sample size of 2,050 cases and 1,836 controls. RESULTS: We identified the top 57 SNPs showing the strongest evidence of association in the AJ dataset (p < 9.9 × 10(-5)). Six SNPs located within gene regions had positive signals in at least one other independent dbGaP dataset: LOC100505836 (Chr3p24), LOC153328/SLC25A48 (Chr5q31.1), UNC13B (9p13.3), SLCO3A1(15q26.1), WNT3(17q21.3) and NSF (17q21.3). We also replicated published associations for the gene regions SNCA (Chr4q21; rs3775442, p = 0.037), PARK16 (Chr1q32.1; rs823114 (NUCKS1), p = 6.12 × 10(-4)), BST1 (Chr4p15; rs12502586, p = 0.027), STK39 (Chr2q24.3; rs3754775, p = 0.005), and LAMP3 (Chr3; rs12493050, p = 0.005) in addition to the two most common PD susceptibility genes in the AJ population LRRK2 (Chr12q12; rs34637584, p = 1.56 × 10(-4)) and GBA (Chr1q21; rs2990245, p = 0.015). CONCLUSIONS: We have demonstrated the utility of the AJ dataset in PD candidate gene and SNP discovery both by replication in dbGaP datasets with a larger sample size and by replicating association of previously identified PD susceptibility genes. Our GWAS study has identified candidate gene regions for PD that are implicated in neuronal signalling and the dopamine pathway. BioMed Central 2011-08-03 /pmc/articles/PMC3166909/ /pubmed/21812969 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2350-12-104 Text en Copyright ©2011 Liu et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Liu, Xinmin
Cheng, Rong
Verbitsky, Miguel
Kisselev, Sergey
Browne, Andrew
Mejia-Sanatana, Helen
Louis, Elan D
Cote, Lucien J
Andrews, Howard
Waters, Cheryl
Ford, Blair
Frucht, Steven
Fahn, Stanley
Marder, Karen
Clark, Lorraine N
Lee, Joseph H
Genome-Wide association study identifies candidate genes for Parkinson's disease in an Ashkenazi Jewish population
title Genome-Wide association study identifies candidate genes for Parkinson's disease in an Ashkenazi Jewish population
title_full Genome-Wide association study identifies candidate genes for Parkinson's disease in an Ashkenazi Jewish population
title_fullStr Genome-Wide association study identifies candidate genes for Parkinson's disease in an Ashkenazi Jewish population
title_full_unstemmed Genome-Wide association study identifies candidate genes for Parkinson's disease in an Ashkenazi Jewish population
title_short Genome-Wide association study identifies candidate genes for Parkinson's disease in an Ashkenazi Jewish population
title_sort genome-wide association study identifies candidate genes for parkinson's disease in an ashkenazi jewish population
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3166909/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21812969
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2350-12-104
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