| Literature DB >> 20368139 |
Lisa Mosconi1, Valentina Berti, Russell H Swerdlow, Alberto Pupi, Ranjan Duara, Mony de Leon.
Abstract
After advanced age, having a parent affected with Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most significant risk factor for developing AD among cognitively normal (NL) individuals. Although rare genetic mutations have been identified among the early-onset forms of familial AD (EOFAD), the genetics of the more common forms of late-onset AD (LOAD) remain elusive. While some LOAD cases appear to be sporadic in nature, genetically mediated risk is evident from the familial aggregation of many LOAD cases. The patterns of transmission and biological mechanisms through which a family history of LOAD confers risk to the offspring are not known. Brain imaging studies using 2-[ (18) F]fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose positron emission tomography ((18)F-FDG PET) have shown that NL individuals with a maternal history of LOAD, but not with a paternal family history, express a phenotype characterised by a pattern of progressive reductions of brain glucose metabolism, similar to that in AD patients. As maternally inherited AD may be associated with as many as 20 per cent of the total LOAD population, understanding the causes and mechanisms of expression of this form of AD is of great relevance. This paper reviews known genetic mutations implicated in EOFAD and their effects on brain chemistry, structure and function; epidemiology and clinical research findings in LOAD, including in vivo imaging findings showing selective patterns of hypometabolism in maternally inherited AD; possible genetic mechanisms involved in maternal transmission of AD, including chromosome X mutations, mitochondrial DNA and imprinting; and genetic mechanisms involved in other neurological disorders with known or suspected maternal inheritance. The review concludes with a discussion of the potential role of brain imaging for identifying endophenotypes in NL individuals at risk for AD, and for directing investigation of potential susceptibility genes for AD.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20368139 PMCID: PMC3033750 DOI: 10.1186/1479-7364-4-3-170
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Genomics ISSN: 1473-9542 Impact factor: 4.639
Figure 1Incidence of AD cases in the USA. State-specific projections up to 2025 (adapted from Hebert et al.[2]).
Genes associated with Alzheimer's disease
| Gene | Chromosome | Transmission | AD | Prevalence | Clinical characteristics | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 21 | Autosomal | EOFAD | 10-15% of | Age of onset <65 years | Reduced CMRglc on | |
| 21 | Autosomal | EOFAD | na | Age of onset <50 years | na | |
| 14 | Autosomal | EOFAD | 30-70% of | Age of onset 40-50 years | Reduced CMRglc on | |
| 1 | Autosomal | EOFAD | <5% of | Age of onset 40-70 years | na | |
| 19 | 3 allelic | LOAD | 40% of | ApoE | Hippocampal atrophy | |
| 11 | SNPs: 8-10 | LOAD | 20-40% of | Increased Aβ production | Hippocampal atrophy | |
| 5 | SNP: T → C | LOAD | 45% of | Poorer episodic memory | Increased hippocampal | |
| 11 | 6 SNPs | LOAD | 70% of | CT-AAG- | na | |
| X | SNP: | LOAD | na | Increased risk of AD | na |
EOFAD = early onset familial Alzheimer's disease; CMRglc = cerebral metabolic rate of glucose; na = not available; FDG-PET = fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose positron emission tomography; PIB-PET = Pittsburgh Compound-B PET; LOAD = late onset AD; MRI = magnetic resonance imaging.
Prevalence of maternally vs paternally inherited late-onset Alzheimer's disease (AD)
| Reference | AD | No | FH- | FHm | FHp | Mother:father |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Heyman | 68 | 11 | 84% | 10% | 6% | 1.8:1 |
| Duara | 311 | 69 | 78% | 17% | 5% | 3.6:1 |
| Edland | 118 | 24 | 80% | 16% | 4% | 3.8:1 |
| Farrer | 251 | 61 | 76% | 16% | 8% | 1.9:1 |
| Gomez-Tortosa | 2594 | 817 | 68% | 23% | 9% | 2.6:1 |
FH- = No family history of AD; FHm = maternal history of AD; FHp = paternal history of AD.
Figure 2Statistical parametric maps showing reduced brain glucose metabolism in cognitively normal individuals with a maternal history of AD (FHm) compared with those with a paternal history of AD (FHp, in red) and with those with no family history of AD (FH-, in green) [7]. Brain regions showing hypometabolism in FHm compared with FHp and FH- include the inferior parietal lobes, lateral and inferior temporal cortex, posterior cingulate/precuneus and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. These same brain regions are typically hypometabolic in clinical AD patients. Figure shows the superior, posterior, right and left lateral views of a three-dimensional volume-rendered MRI.
Figure 3Statistical parametric maps showing CMRglc reductions over a two-year follow-up interval. Compared with the baseline, reduced follow-up CMRglc was restricted to the frontal cortices in normal subjects with no family history of AD (top row, in green) and in those with an AD father (middle row, in blue), whereas follow-up CMRglc was reduced in inferior parietal, lateral and inferior temporal, posterior cingulate/precuneus and prefrontal cortex in normal individuals with a maternal history of AD (bottom row, in red). Figure shows the anterior, right lateral, superior and mid-sagittal views of a three-dimensional volume-rendered MRI.
Figure 4. The 18F-FDG PET of the son of an AD father (left) shows no CMRglc abnormalities, while the 18F-FDG PET of the daughter of an AD mother (right) shows areas of reduced CMRglc (indicated by arrows) [7]. CMRglc measures are represented on a colour-coded scale, ranging from 0 to 60 μmol glucose/100 g/min (right side of figure).
Figure 5The cybrid technique (adapted from Kish .[114]). The procedure involves obtaining mtDNA from persons with and without disease. Usually, platelets are used as the mtDNA donor tissue, since platelets are easily obtained through standard phlebotomy, are easy to isolate through centrifugation and lack nuclei. Mixing platelets with cell lines depleted of their own endogenous mtDNA allows exchange of platelet and cell line materials, which results in cell lines containing mtDNA from the individual platelet donors. These cell lines expand under standard culture conditions, and their biochemical assessment allows investigators to evaluate parameters directly or indirectly referable to mitochondria and the mtDNA they carry. Differences in mtDNA lead to differences in the mtDNA-encoded subunits of oxidative phosphorylation complexes I, III, IV and V. Functional differences between cybrid cell lines should reflect differences in mtDNA that cause changes in these enzyme complexes.
Mitochondrial DNA mutations and haplotypes associated with late-onset AD
| Approach | Finding | Positive findings | Negative |
|---|---|---|---|
| Case-control | T146G, | Increased AD | No mutation |
| 4977 bp | More frequent in | ||
| A4336G | More frequent in | No | |
| Haplogroup | K, U | Decreased risk of | No effect of |
| U | Increased risk in | ||
| J | Increased in AD | No AD | |
| T | Decreased AD risk | No AD |
bp = base pair
Mitochondrial DNA mutations and haplotypes associated with Parkinson's disease (PD)
| mtDNA | Hypothesised | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Haplogroup J, K | Lower PD risk | Van der Walt |
| UKJT haplogroup | Lower PD risk | Pyle |
| JTIWX | Higher PD and | Autere |
| Haplogroup I, J, K | Decreased risk | Autere |
| mtDNA | Lower PD risk | Van der Walt |
| mtDNA | Lower PD risk | Van der Walt |
| mtDNA | Increased PD | Kirchner |
| mtDNA | No difference | Huerta |
| mtDNA | More frequent in | Tan |
Medical and neurological disorders with known or suspected maternal inheritance
| Disorder | Mechanism | Clinical phenotype | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kearns-Sayre | mtDNA deletions present at | Paralysis of the extraocular | Maceluch |
| Mitochondrial | mtDNA mutation: A3243G | Children and young adults. | Thambisetty |
| Myoclonic epilepsy with | mtDNA mutation: A8344G, | Myclonus, seizures, | DiMauro |
| Neuropathy, ataxia, | mtDNA mutation: T8993G, | Retinitis pigmentosa, dementia, | Holt |
| Maternally inherited | mtDNA mutation: T8993G, | Symmetrical lesions in the basal | Holt |
| Leber's hereditary optic | mtDNA mutation: G11778A | Acute or subacute loss of vision | Yen |
| Progressive external | mtDNA mutation in genes | Progressive paralysis of the | Silvestri |
| Maternally inherited | mtDNA mutation: A3243G | Impaired glucose tolerance | Hosszufalusi |
| Juvenile myoclonic | Genomic imprinting: EJM-1 | Seizures | Pal |
| Tourette's syndrome | Genomic imprinting | Multiple physical (motor) and | Eapen |
| Angelman syndrome | Genomic imprinting | Intellectual and developmental | Horsthemke |
| Autism | Genomic imprinting | Autism | Cook |
| Fragile X syndrome | Unstable expansions of a CGG | Stereotypic movements and | Mandel |
| Friedreich ataxia | GAA repeat expansion | Ataxia, gait disturbance, speech | La Pean |
| Myotonic dystrophy | CTG repeat expansion | Muscle weakness, cataract, | Botta |
bp = base pair; CSF = cerebrospinal fluid