| Literature DB >> 20061627 |
Erin L Heinzen1, Anna C Need, Kathleen M Hayden, Ornit Chiba-Falek, Allen D Roses, Warren J Strittmatter, James R Burke, Christine M Hulette, Kathleen A Welsh-Bohmer, David B Goldstein.
Abstract
Alzheimer's disease is a complex and progressive neurodegenerative disease leading to loss of memory, cognitive impairment, and ultimately death. To date, six large-scale genome-wide association studies have been conducted to identify SNPs that influence disease predisposition. These studies have confirmed the well-known APOE epsilon4 risk allele, identified a novel variant that influences disease risk within the APOE epsilon4 population, found a SNP that modifies the age of disease onset, as well as reported the first sex-linked susceptibility variant. Here we report a genome-wide scan of Alzheimer's disease in a set of 331 cases and 368 controls, extending analyses for the first time to include assessments of copy number variation. In this analysis, no new SNPs show genome-wide significance. We also screened for effects of copy number variation, and while nothing was significant, a duplication in CHRNA7 appears interesting enough to warrant further investigation.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20061627 PMCID: PMC2883723 DOI: 10.3233/JAD-2010-1212
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Alzheimers Dis ISSN: 1387-2877 Impact factor: 4.472