| Literature DB >> 22438815 |
Christina M Lill1, Johannes T Roehr, Matthew B McQueen, Fotini K Kavvoura, Sachin Bagade, Brit-Maren M Schjeide, Leif M Schjeide, Esther Meissner, Ute Zauft, Nicole C Allen, Tian Liu, Marcel Schilling, Kari J Anderson, Gary Beecham, Daniela Berg, Joanna M Biernacka, Alexis Brice, Anita L DeStefano, Chuong B Do, Nicholas Eriksson, Stewart A Factor, Matthew J Farrer, Tatiana Foroud, Thomas Gasser, Taye Hamza, John A Hardy, Peter Heutink, Erin M Hill-Burns, Christine Klein, Jeanne C Latourelle, Demetrius M Maraganore, Eden R Martin, Maria Martinez, Richard H Myers, Michael A Nalls, Nathan Pankratz, Haydeh Payami, Wataru Satake, William K Scott, Manu Sharma, Andrew B Singleton, Kari Stefansson, Tatsushi Toda, Joyce Y Tung, Jeffery Vance, Nick W Wood, Cyrus P Zabetian, Peter Young, Rudolph E Tanzi, Muin J Khoury, Frauke Zipp, Hans Lehrach, John P A Ioannidis, Lars Bertram.
Abstract
More than 800 published genetic association studies have implicated dozens of potential risk loci in Parkinson's disease (PD). To facilitate the interpretation of these findings, we have created a dedicated online resource, PDGene, that comprehensively collects and meta-analyzes all published studies in the field. A systematic literature screen of -27,000 articles yielded 828 eligible articles from which relevant data were extracted. In addition, individual-level data from three publicly available genome-wide association studies (GWAS) were obtained and subjected to genotype imputation and analysis. Overall, we performed meta-analyses on more than seven million polymorphisms originating either from GWAS datasets and/or from smaller scale PD association studies. Meta-analyses on 147 SNPs were supplemented by unpublished GWAS data from up to 16,452 PD cases and 48,810 controls. Eleven loci showed genome-wide significant (P < 5 × 10(-8)) association with disease risk: BST1, CCDC62/HIP1R, DGKQ/GAK, GBA, LRRK2, MAPT, MCCC1/LAMP3, PARK16, SNCA, STK39, and SYT11/RAB25. In addition, we identified novel evidence for genome-wide significant association with a polymorphism in ITGA8 (rs7077361, OR 0.88, P = 1.3 × 10(-8)). All meta-analysis results are freely available on a dedicated online database (www.pdgene.org), which is cross-linked with a customized track on the UCSC Genome Browser. Our study provides an exhaustive and up-to-date summary of the status of PD genetics research that can be readily scaled to include the results of future large-scale genetics projects, including next-generation sequencing studies.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22438815 PMCID: PMC3305333 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1002548
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Genet ISSN: 1553-7390 Impact factor: 5.917
Overview of genome-wide association studies (GWAS) published in PD until March 31, 2011.
| GWAS | Design GWAS (Follow-up) | Population GWAS (Follow-up) | # SNPs | # PD GWAS (Follow-up) | # CTRL GWAS (Follow-up) | “Featured” genetic loci |
| Maraganore, 2005 (ref. 9) | Family-based (case-control) | USA-LEAPS (USA) | 198,345 | 443 (332) | 443 (332) |
|
| Fung, 2006 (ref. 10) | Case-control (-) | USA-NINDS | 408,803 | 267 (-) | 270 (-) |
|
| Pankratz, 2009 (ref. 11) | Case-control (-) | USA-PROGENI/GenePD (-) | 328,189 | 857 (-) | 867 (-) |
|
| Simon-Sanchez, 2009 (ref. 12) | Case-control (case-control) | USA-NINDS, Germany(USA, Germany, UK) | 463,185 | 1,745 (3,452) | 4,047 (4,756) |
|
| Satake, 2009 (ref. 13) | Case-control (case-control) | Japan (Japan) | 435,470 | 1,078 (993) | 2,628 (15,753) |
|
| Edwards, 2010 (ref. 14) | Case-control (-) | USA-HIHG (-) | 491,376 | 604 (-) | 619 (-) |
|
| Hamza, 2010 (ref. 15) | Case-control (-) | USA-NGRC (-) | 811,597 | 2,000 (-) | 1,986 (-) |
|
| Spencer, 2011 (ref. 16) | Case-control (case-control) | UK-WTCCC2 (France) | 1,733,533 | 1,705 (1,039) | 5,175 (1,984) |
|
| Saad, 2011 (ref. 17) | Case-control (case-control) | France (UK-WTCCC2, Australia) | 492,929 | 1,039 (3,232) | 1,984 (7,064) |
|
| Simon-Sanchez, 2011 (ref. 18) | Case-control (case-control) | Netherlands | 514,799 | 772 (-) | 2024 (-) |
|
The overview is based on content on the PDGene website (http://www.pdgene.org; current on March 31st, 2011). Studies are listed in order of publication date. ‘# PD GWAS’ and ‘# CTRL GWAS’ refers to sample sizes used in the initial GWAS datasets, whereas ‘Follow-up’ refers to the total number of replication samples where applicable. ‘Featured genes’ are those genes/loci that were declared as ‘associated’ in the original publication; note that criteria for declaring association varies across studies. Genetic loci in bold font denote genes showing genome-wide significant results (P<5×10−8) in the PDGene meta-analyses.
Genome-wide significant summary meta-analysis results of the PDGene database in populations of Caucasian and Asian decent.
| Caucasian ethnicity | |||||||||||
| Locus | Polymorphism | Location (hg18) | MAF | Allele contrast | N datasets | N samples | OR (95% CI) |
|
| HuGENet | BF |
|
| N370S | chr1:153451576 | 0.01 | G vs. A | 15 | 44,851 | 3.51 (2.55–4.83) | 1.44×10−14 | 38 (0–66) | A | 6.6 |
|
| chr1:154105678 | chr1:154105678 | 0.02 | T vs. C | 6 | 17,300 | 1.73 (1.48–2.02) | 2.35×10−12 | 0 (0–52) | B* | 8.2 |
| PARK16 | rs947211 | chr1:204019288 | 0.23 | A vs. G | 12 | 69,262 | 0.91 (0.88–0.94) | 8.00×10−10 | 0 (0–66) | A | 6.8 |
|
| rs2390669 | chr2:168800188 | 0.13 | C vs. A | 14 | 35,159 | 1.19 (1.12–1.25) | 1.37×10−09 | 18 (0–56) | A | 4.9* |
|
| rs11711441 | chr3:184303969 | 0.14 | A vs. G | 25 | 46,502 | 0.86 (0.82–0.91) | 9.20×10−10 | 18 (0–50) | A | 6.8 |
|
| rs11248060 | chr4:954359 | 0.12 | T vs. C | 10 | 57,716 | 1.21 (1.15–1.27) | 3.04×10−12 | 11 (0–52) | A | 9.2 |
|
| rs11724635 | chr4:15346199 | 0.43 | C vs. A | 26 | 46,586 | 0.88 (0.84–0.91) | 1.87×10−10 | 43 (10–64) | A | 7.5 |
|
| rs356219 | chr4:90856624 | 0.41 | G vs. A | 31 | 79,494 | 1.29 (1.25–1.33) | 6.06×10−65 | 16 (0–46) | A | 61.0 |
|
| rs7077361 | chr10:15601549 | 0.12 | C vs. T | 11 | 61,036 | 0.88 (0.84–0.92) | 1.51×10−08 | 0 (0–55) | A | 5.7 |
|
| rs1491942 | chr12:38907075 | 0.21 | G vs. C | 21 | 34,123 | 1.17 (1.13–1.22) | 6.44×10−15 | 0 (0–38) | A | 11.8 |
|
| rs10847864 | chr12:121892551 | 0.39 | T vs. G | 23 | 38,367 | 1.15 (1.11–1.18) | 4.37×10−17 | 0 (0–35) | A | 14.4 |
|
| H1H2 | chr17:42131818–41149582 | 0.20 | H2 vs. H1 | 37 | 50,389 | 0.78 (0.75–0.80) | 7.97×10−52 | 0 (0–29) | A | 48.1 |
Whenever multiple polymorphisms showed genome-wide significant association in the same locus, only the variant with the smallest P-value is listed here. Note that, overall, 103 PDGene meta-analyses results across the 12 loci listed above yield genome-wide significant evidence for association with PD. For a complete list of these as well as the non-genome-wide significant meta-analysis results performed for the datafreeze, see Table S1. MAF = minor allele frequency in cases and controls combined; N = Number, OR = Odds Ratio; CI = confidence interval; I 2 = estimate of percentage of between-study heterogeneity that is beyond chance. BF = Bayes factor. *Note that additional polymorphisms in these loci showing genome-wide significant association with PD yield are graded with “strong epidemiologic credibility” (grade A) according to the HuGENet criteria [26], [27], and a Bayes Factor >5 [25], respectively (see Table S1 for more details).
Figure 1Manhattan plot of all meta-analysis results performed in PDGene.
This summary combines association results from 7,123,986 random-effects meta-analyses based on the March 31st 2011 datafreeze of the PDGene database. Results are plotted as −log10 P-values (y-axis) against physical chromosomal location (x-axis). Black and grey dots indicate results originating exclusively from the three fully publicly available GWAS datasets [10], [12], [13] (see Methods), while green dots are based on a combination of smaller scale studies, supplemented by GWAS datasets (where applicable). Gene annotations are provided for genes highlighted in the main text.
Figure 2Forest plot of the meta-analysis of rs7077361 in ITGA8.
Study-specific allelic odds ratios (ORs, black squares) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs, lines) were calculated for each included dataset. The summary OR and CI was calculated using the DerSimonian Laird random-effects model (grey diamond) [31]. C = Caucasian ancestry.
Figure 3Flowchart of literature search, data extraction, and analysis strategies applied for PDGene.