| Literature DB >> 25604855 |
Eva C Schulte1,2, Akio Fukumori3,4, Brit Mollenhauer5,6, Hyun Hor7, Thomas Arzberger8, Robert Perneczky9,10, Alexander Kurz9, Janine Diehl-Schmid9, Michael Hüll11, Peter Lichtner2,12, Gertrud Eckstein2, Alexander Zimprich13, Dietrich Haubenberger13, Walter Pirker13, Thomas Brücke14, Benjamin Bereznai15, Maria J Molnar15, Oswaldo Lorenzo-Betancor16,17,18, Pau Pastor16,17,18, Annette Peters19, Christian Gieger20, Xavier Estivill7, Thomas Meitinger2,12,21, Hans A Kretzschmar8, Claudia Trenkwalder5,6, Christian Haass3,4,21, Juliane Winkelmann1,2,12,21.
Abstract
Many individuals with Parkinson's disease (PD) develop cognitive deficits, and a phenotypic and molecular overlap between neurodegenerative diseases exists. We investigated the contribution of rare variants in seven genes of known relevance to dementias (β-amyloid precursor protein (APP), PSEN1/2, MAPT (microtubule-associated protein tau), fused in sarcoma (FUS), granulin (GRN) and TAR DNA-binding protein 43 (TDP-43)) to PD and PD plus dementia (PD+D) in a discovery sample of 376 individuals with PD and followed by the genotyping of 25 out of the 27 identified variants with a minor allele frequency <5% in 975 individuals with PD, 93 cases with Lewy body disease on neuropathological examination, 613 individuals with Alzheimer's disease (AD), 182 cases with frontotemporal dementia and 1014 general population controls. Variants identified in APP were functionally followed up by Aβ mass spectrometry in transiently transfected HEK293 cells. PD+D cases harbored more rare variants across all the seven genes than PD individuals without dementia, and rare variants in APP were more common in PD cases overall than in either the AD cases or controls. When additional controls from publically available databases were added, one rare variant in APP (c.1795G>A(p.(E599K))) was significantly associated with the PD phenotype but was not found in either the PD cases or controls of an independent replication sample. One of the identified rare variants (c.2125G>A (p.(G709S))) shifted the Aβ spectrum from Aβ40 to Aβ39 and Aβ37. Although the precise mechanism remains to be elucidated, our data suggest a possible role for APP in modifying the PD phenotype as well as a general contribution of genetic factors to the development of dementia in individuals with PD.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25604855 PMCID: PMC4592093 DOI: 10.1038/ejhg.2014.300
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Hum Genet ISSN: 1018-4813 Impact factor: 4.246