| Literature DB >> 18439297 |
Ryan J Haasl1, M Reza Ahmadi, Sivan Vadakkadath Meethal, Carey E Gleason, Sterling C Johnson, Sanjay Asthana, Richard L Bowen, Craig S Atwood.
Abstract
Genetic and biochemical studies support the apolipoprotein E (APOE) epsilon4 allele as a major risk factor for late-onset Alzheimer's disease (AD), though ~50% of AD patients do not carry the allele. APOE transports cholesterol for luteinizing hormone (LH)-regulated steroidogenesis, and both LH and neurosteroids have been implicated in the etiology of AD. Since polymorphisms of LH beta-subunit (LHB) and its receptor (LHCGR) have not been tested for their association with AD, we scored AD and age-matched control samples for APOE genotype and 14 polymorphisms of LHB and LHCGR. Thirteen gene-gene interactions between the loci of LHB, LHCGR, and APOE were associated with AD. The most strongly supported of these interactions was between an LHCGR intronic polymorphism (rs4073366; lhcgr2) and APOE in males, which was detected using all three interaction analyses: linkage disequilibrium, multi-dimensionality reduction, and logistic regression. While the APOE epsilon4 allele carried significant risk of AD in males [p = 0.007, odds ratio (OR) = 3.08(95%confidence interval: 1.37, 6.91)], epsilon4-positive males carrying 1 or 2 C-alleles at lhcgr2 exhibited significantly decreased risk of AD [OR = 0.06(0.01, 0.38); p = 0.003]. This suggests that the lhcgr2 C-allele or a closely linked locus greatly reduces the risk of AD in males carrying an APOE epsilon4 allele. The reversal of risk embodied in this interaction powerfully supports the importance of considering the role gene-gene interactions play in the etiology of complex biological diseases and demonstrates the importance of using multiple analytic methods to detect well-supported gene-gene interactions.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18439297 PMCID: PMC2396156 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2350-9-37
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Genet ISSN: 1471-2350 Impact factor: 2.103
Scored polymorphisms of LHB and LHCGR.
| lhb1 | rs3956233 | Intron 1 | Intronic SNP | |
| lhb2 | rs4002462 | Intron 1 | Intronic SNP | |
| * | rs5030775a | Exon 2 (signal peptide) | Non-synonymous SNP | |
| lhb3 | rs1800447 | Exon 2 (vLH SNP 1) | Non-synonymous SNP | |
| ** | (rs1800447)b | Exon 2 (vLH SNP 2) | Non-synonymous SNP | |
| lhb4 | rs6521 | Exon 2 | Synonymous SNP | |
| lhb5 | rs1056914 | Exon 2 | Synonymous SNP | |
| lhb6 | rs2387588 | Intron 2 | Intronic SNP | |
| lhb7 | rs4287687 | Intron 2 | Intronic SNP | |
| lhcgr1 | rs4539842 | Exon 1 | 6 base insertion/deletion | |
| lhcgr2 | rs4073366 | Intron 1 | Intronic SNP | |
| lhcgr3 | rs12470652 | Exon 10 | Non-synonymous SNP | |
| lhcgr4 | rs2293275 | Exon 10 | Non-synonymous SNP | |
| lhcgr5 | rs13006488 | Exon 11 | Synonymous SNP |
ars5030775 not included in analyses, as it was invariant in our cohort
bsecond vLH position not included in analyses since it is in complete linkage disequilibrium with lhb3
Figure 1Age of onset is significantly affected by lhcgr2 genotype in males. AoO in lhcgr2 heterozygous and homozygous males (n = 50, p = 0.001).
Loci exhibiting pairwise linkage disequilibrium at p <= 0.05. Bold-faced loci indicate a combination detected at the α = 0.05 level in an AD stratum but not in the corresponding control stratum. These multi-locus combinations were used as models in LR analyses.
| 0.576 | 0.029 | lhcgr1/lhb3 | 1.000 | 0.019 | |||
| lhcgr1/lhb5 | 0.388 | 0.020 | 0.494 | 0.033 | |||
| 1.000 | 0.002a | 0.643 | 0.048 | ||||
| 0.305 | 0.023 | 0.746 | 0.047 | ||||
| 0.293 | 0.033 | ||||||
| 0.335 | 0.028 | ||||||
| lhcgr2/ | 0.520 | 0.032 | lhcgr1/lhb1 | 0.415 | 0.004b | ||
| 0.718 | <0.0001b | lhcgr1/ | 0.281 | 0.031 | |||
| lhcgr2/ | 0.315 | 0.007b | |||||
| lhcgr1/lhb1 | 0.465 | 0.017 | lhcgr1/lhb1 | 0.352 | 0.006c | ||
| 0.540 | <0.0001c | lhcgr1/lhb2 | 0.419 | 0.021 | |||
| lhcgr2/ | 0.265 | 0.044 | |||||
| lhcgr1/lhb1 | 0.387 | 0.004a | lhcgr1/lhb1 | 0.369 | 0.01a | ||
| 0.301 | 0.047 | lhcgr2/ | 0.294 | 0.019 | |||
| 0.365 | 0.009a | lhb3/ | 0.296 | 0.041 | |||
| 0.312 | 0.038 | ||||||
| 0.458 | 0.001a | ||||||
| 0.323 | 0.028 |
a significant at the corrected α = 0.0077 level (modified FDR) for the male dataset
b significant at the corrected α = 0.0082 level (modified FDR) for the female dataset
c significant at the corrected α = 0.0081 level (modified FDR) for the total dataset.
Figure 2Risk associated with ε4 allele is negated in male, lhcgr2 heterozygotes. Contingency table illustrating the relative frequencies of lhcgr2/APOE genotypes in males and females (black = AD; white = Control).
Figure 3Novel missense mutation in exon 11 of LHCGR. (A) Chromatogram from one of two samples heterozygous for a novel C->T (Arg->Stop) missense mutation in codon 479 (exon 11) of LHCGR. (B) Chromatogram from a sample homozygous for 'C' at the same site.
Distribution of significant associations between non-APOE polymorphisms and AD. LD = linkage disequilibrium, MDR = multi-dimensionality reduction, LR = logistic regression, AoO = age of onset, ●● = significant at the modified FDR α level, or, in the case of MDR, according to a priori significance criteria: for significant MDR results, the proportion of 10 CVs that identified this model as best and proportion of 10 CVs in which this model produced a training accuracy >0.5 are listed; ● = approaching significance (p <= 0.05, the experimentwise α). Note the consistent identification of lhcgr2/APOE as a significant interaction in males. CV = cross-validation.
| lhb2 | ♂ | ● | ||||
| lhcgr2 | ♂ | ●● | ||||
| lhcgr1/lhb1 | ♂ | ● | ||||
| lhcgr1/lhb5 | ♂ | ● | ||||
| lhcgr2/ | ♂ | ●● | ●● | ●● | ||
| lhcgr5/lhb2 | ♂ | ● | ● | |||
| lhcgr5/lhb4 | ♂ | ● | ● | |||
| lhcgr5/lhb5 | ♂ | ● | ||||
| lhcgr2/lhcgr5/ | ♂ | ●● | ||||
| lhcgr2/ | ♀ | ● | ||||
| lhb3/ | ♀ | ●● | ||||
| lhb5/ | ♀ | ●● | ||||
| lhcgr1/lhb1 | Total | ● | ||||
| lhb3/ | Total | ●● | ||||
| lhcgr1/lhcgr2/ | Total | ●● |
Figure 4lhcgr2 shares similarity with consensus 3' acceptor splice sites and ApoE mRNA. (A) lhcgr2 as a potential miRNA that regulates the expression of ApoE. The reversed LHCGR sequence is complimentary to a fragment of APOE mRNA at 13 out of 16 sites. (B) Pairwise sequence alignment of a portion of LHR intron 1 in human and mouse (Mus musculus). The human sequence includes lhr2 (rs4073366) and bears sequence features characteristic of 3' acceptor splice sites.
Figure 5Significant linkage disequilibrium between lhcgr1 and multiple . In the schematic of LHB, exons are represented as black boxes and the positions of the 7 LHB polymorphisms scored are indicated by vertical lines. lhb3 is composed of two SNPs, which are in complete LD with each other. For each polymorphism, genotype frequencies are represented in the form of two pie charts, where the left chart represents genotype frequencies among individuals lacking an LQ-insert allele in exon 1 of LHCGR (lhcgr1) and the right chart represents genotype frequencies among individuals possessing 1 or 2 LQ-insert alleles. Frequencies above the graphs correspond to AD males, while frequencies below the graph correspond to all individuals sampled in this study. * = significant difference (p < 0.05), ** = highly significant difference (p < 0.01).
Primer pairs used to amplify portions of APOE, LHB, and LHCGR.
| F: 5'-GTTACCCCAGGCATCCTATC-3' | |
| F: 5'-GGTCCTGAATAGGAGATGCCA-3' | |
| F: 5'-CACTCAGAGGCCGTCCAAG-3' | |
| F: 5'-ACAGTCAGGTTTAGCCTGAA-3' | |
| F: 5'-CAGAAAATCCCTTACCTCAAGC-3' |