| Literature DB >> 31557888 |
Vo Van Giau1, Eva Bagyinszky2, Young Chul Youn3, Seong Soo A An4, SangYun Kim5.
Abstract
The number of patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) is rapidly increasing in Asia. Mutations in the amyloid protein precursor (APP), presenilin-1 (PSEN1), and presenilin-2 (PSEN2) genes can cause autosomal dominant forms of early-onset AD (EOAD). Although these genes have been extensively studied, variant classification remains a challenge, highlighting the need to colligate mutations across populations. In this study, we performed a genetic screening for mutations in the APP, PSEN1, and PSEN2 genes in 200 clinically diagnosed EOAD patients across four Asian countries, including Thailand, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Korea, between 2009 and 2018. Thirty-two (16%) patients presented pathogenic APP, PSEN1, or PSEN2 variants; eight (25%), 19 (59%), and five (16%) of the 32 patients presented APP, PSEN1, and PSEN2 variants, respectively. Among the 21 novel and known non-synonymous variants, five APP variants were found in Korean patients and one APP variant was identified in a Thai patient with EOAD. Nine, two, and one PSEN1 mutation was found in a Korean patient, Malaysian siblings, and a Thai patient, respectively. Unlike PSEN1 mutations, PSEN2 mutations were rare in patients with EOAD; only three variants were found in Korean patients with EOAD. Comparison of AD-causative point mutations in Asian countries; our findings explained only a small fraction of patients, leaving approximately 84% (p = 0.01) of autosomal dominant pedigrees genetically unexplained. We suggest that the use of high-throughput sequencing technologies for EOAD patients can potentially improve our understanding of the molecular mechanisms of AD.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Asian; EOAD; genetics; mutation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31557888 PMCID: PMC6801447 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20194757
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Distribution of APP, PSEN1, and PSEN2 mutations in Asian countries. The fastest increase in the number of elderly individuals has been observed in Asian countries with approximately 60% of all patients diagnosed with dementia. The countries from which the gene mutations are reported are shown in purple.
APP, PSEN1, and PSEN2 mutations discovered in Asian early-onset Alzheimer’s disease (EOAD) patients between 2009 and 2018.
| Gene | Protein Change | Nucleotide Change | Exon | APOE | AOO (Years) | Gender | Family History | Pathogenicity Prediction | Clinical Significance | Population | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PolyPhen | SIFT | ||||||||||
|
| p.Glu145Lys | c.433G > A | 4 | ε3/ε3 | 55 | F | Y | D: 0.932 | T:0.496 | Located outside of the amyloid progressing region | Korean |
| p.Val225Ala | c.674T > C | 7 | ε3/ε3 | 65 | F | Y | D: 932 | T: 0.496 | |||
| p.Thr297Met | c.890C > T | 7 | ε3/ε3 | 60 | F | Y | D: 0.98 | D: 0.0 | |||
| p.Pro484Ser | c.1450C > T | 11 | ε4/ε4 | 61 | F | Y | P: 0.765 | T: 0.063 | |||
| p.Val604Met | c.1810C > T | 14 | ε3/ε3 | 55 | M | Y | B: 0.450 | T: 0.095 | Thai | ||
| p.Val669Leu | c.2005G > C | 17 | ε3/ε3 | 55 | F | Y | B: 0.017 | T: 0.16 | Novel mutation, may cause EOAD | Korean | |
|
| p.Val96Phe | c.286G > T | 4 | ε3/ε4 | 40 | M | Y | D: 1.0 | T: 0.002 | Known pathogenic mutation (EOAD) | Malaysian |
| ε3/ε4 | 40 | F | N | ||||||||
| p.Thr116Ile | c.335C > T | 5 | ε3/ε3 | 38 | F | Y | D: 1.00 | D: 0 | Known pathogenic mutation (EOAD) | Korean | |
| ε3/ε3 | 41 | F | Y | ||||||||
| p.Thr119Ile | c.356C > T | ε3/ε3 | 64 | F | Y | D: 1.00 | D: 0 | Novel mutation, may be involved in EOAD | |||
| p.His163Pro | c.488A > C | 4 | ε3/ε3 | 37 | F | Y | D: 1.00 | D: 0 | Novel mutation, may be involved in EOAD | ||
| p.Trp165Cys | c.695G > T | 6 | ε3/ε3 | 53 | M | Y | D: 1.00 | D: 0.001 | Known pathogenic mutation (EOAD) | ||
| p.Glu184Gly | c.551A > G | 7 | ε3/ε3 | 37 | F | Y | D: 0.878 | D: 0.005 | Known pathogenic mutation (EOAD) | ||
| p.Gly209Ala | c.626G > C | 7 | ε3/ε3 | 54 | F | Y | D: 1.00 | D: 0 | Novel mutation, may be involved in EOAD | ||
| p.Leu226Phe | CTC > TTC | 7 | ε3/ε3 | 37 | F | Y | D: 1.00 | D: 0 | Known pathogenic mutation (EOAD) | ||
| p.Leu232Pro | c.695T > C | 7 | ε3/ε3 | 37 | M | Y | D: 1.00 | D: 0 | Novel mutation, may be involved in EOAD | ||
| p.Glu280Lys | c.826G > A | 8 | ε3/ε3 | 48 | M | Y | D: 1.00 | D: 0 | Novel mutation, may be involved in EOAD | Malaysian | |
| ε3/ε3 | 55 | F | Y | ||||||||
| ε3/ε3 | 57 | M | Y | ||||||||
| p.Ala285Val | c.854C > T | 8 | ε3/ε3 | 46 | F | N | D: 1.0 | D: 0.015 | Known pathogenic mutation (EOAD) | Korean | |
| p.Gly417Ala | c.1250G > C | 12 | ε3/ε3 | 37 | M | N | D: 1.00 | D: 0 | Novel mutation, may be involved in EOAD | ||
|
| p.Arg62Cys | c.184C > T | 5 | ε3/ε3 | 49 | M | N | D: 0.877 | D: 0.05 | Known mutation, may be involved AD | Korean |
| p.His169Asn | c.505C > A | 6 | ε3/ε3 | 56 | F | Y | D: 1.00 | D: 0 | Known mutation, May be involved AD | ||
| p.Val214Leu | c.640G > A | 7 | ε3/ε3 | 56 | M | Y | D: 0.836 | D: 0.09 | May be involved AD | ||
| ε3/ε4 | 70 | F | Y | D: 0.836 | D: 0.09 | May be involved AD | |||||
Abbreviations: MC, number of mutations carriers in the family; AOO, age of onset ranges in the family; DD, disease duration (at death or last examination); APOE, apolipoprotein E genotype; F, familial; S, sporadic; Y, yes, U, unknown; D, damaging; AD, Alzheimer’s disease; EOAD: early-onset Alzheimer’s disease.
The spectrum of APP, PSEN1, and PSEN2 mutations found in Asian countries.
| Gene | Exon | Codon, Mutation | Location in the Protein | Age of Onset, Clinical Characteristics | Pathogenic Nature | Country | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 3 | p.Glu145Lys | N-terminal | 50s/Familial, EOAD | Located outside of the amyloid progressing region | Korea | This study |
| 4 | p.Val225Ala | N-terminal | 65/Familial, EOAD | This study | |||
| 7 | pThr297Met | N-terminal | 60s/Familial, EOAD | This study | |||
| 8 | p. Pro484Ser | N-terminal | 60s/Familial, EOAD | This study | |||
| 14 | p.Val604Met | N-terminal | 55/Familial, EOAD | Pathogenic | Thailand | This study | |
| 16 | p.Val669Leu | N-terminal | 56 years; AD with a positive family history | Located nearby the β-secretase cleavage site of APP, right next to the Swedish APP (Lys, Met670/671Asn, Leu) mutation | Korea | This study | |
| p.Asp678Asn | N-terminal | 59–65 years/familial, EOAD | Probably pathogenic, may enhance the toxic amyloid oligomer formation | Japan | Wakutani et al., 2004 [ | ||
| 17 | p.Glu693del | N-terminal | 44 years/familial, EOAD/MCI | Enhances the toxic amyloid oligomer formation | Japan | Tomiyama et al., 2008 [ | |
| p. Val710Gly | TM-I | 65–82 years/Familial, AD, Parkinsonism | Probably pathogenic | China, Taiwan | Thajeb et al. 2009 [ | ||
| p. Thr714Ala | TM-I | 47–55 years/Familial, EOAD, epilepsy | Probably pathogenic | Iran | Pasalar et al. 2002 [ | ||
| p.Val715Met | TM-I | 41 years/ | Expressed in HEK293 cells, revealed 2* decrease in Abeta 40 levels. Might destroy the cleavage of gamma secretase at site at Abeta40 | Korea | Park et al., 2008 [ | ||
| p.Val717Ile | TM-I | 53 years/Familial, EOAD | Increased Abeta42/Abeta40 ratio in CHO and HEK293 cells | Japan | Yoshioka et al., 1991 [ | ||
| 54 years/unknown, EOAD | Thailand | Jiao et al., 2014 [ | |||||
| p. Ile718Leu | TM-I | 65–82 years/Familial, AD, Parkinsonism | Probably pathogenic | China, Taiwan | Thajeb et al., 2009 [ | ||
| p.Leu720Ser | TM-I | 65–82 years/Familial, AD, Parkinsonism | Probably pathogenic | China, Taiwan | Thajeb et al. 2009 [ | ||
| 4 | p.Leu85Pro | TM-I | 26 years, Juvenile EOAD | Abeta42/Abeta40 ratio increased in HEK293 | Japan | Ataka et al. 2004 [ | |
| p. Val96Phe | TM-I | EOAD, 49–60 years | 2.1 * increased Abeta 42/40 ratio in COS-1 cells | Japan | Kamino et al. 1996 [ | ||
| p.Val97Leu | TM-I | EOAD | Higher beta secretase activity in human neuroblastoma cells | China | Fang et al. 2006 [ | ||
| p. Phe105Cys | HL-I | 59 years/Familial, EOAD | Survival of mutant neuroblastoma cells dropped | China | Jiao et al., 2014 [ | ||
| 5 | p. Gly111Val | HL-I | EOAD; 59 years/Familial | Increased ratios of secreted Aβ42/Aβ40 in vitro study | China | Qiu et al., 2019 [ | |
| p. Thr116Ile | HL-I | Late 30s–early-40s years; EOAD with a probable familial | Possible pathogenic mechanisms of mutation | Korea | This study | ||
| p. Thr119Ile | HL-I | 49–64 years; EOAD with a probable familial | |||||
| p.Glu120Lys | HL-I | 40–65 years/Familial, EOAD | Probably pathogenic | Iran | Akbari et al., 2013 [ | ||
| p.Glu123Lys | HL-I | 26–45 years, EOAD, myoclonus, epilepsy | Abeta42/total Abeta increased in COS-1 cells (2.7 *) and in HEK293 (4 *) cells | Japan | Yasuda et al. 1999 [ | ||
| p.Ala136Gly | TM-II | Unknown, EOAD | Survival of mutant neuroblastoma cells dropped, deleterious effects | China | Fang et al., 2007 [ | ||
| p.Met139Ile | TM-II | 38 years/Familial, EOAD | Ratio of Abeta42/total Abeta increased in COS-1 cell lines. | Korea | Kim et al., 2010 [ | ||
| p. Ile143Thr | TM-II | 26–45 years, EOAD, myoclonus, epilepsy | Abeta42/total Abeta increased in COS-1 cells (2.7 *) and in HEK293 (4 *) cells | Japan | Arai et al., 2008 [ | ||
| p.Tyr154Asn | TM-II | 40–60 years, EOAD, spastic paraparesis | Pathogenic nature might be associated with the missing aromatic ring. | Japan | Hattori et al., 2004 [ | ||
| 6 | p.His163Arg | HL-II | 43–50 years/5 Japanese families, both familial and de novo cases | Abeta42/Abeta40 ratio increased 2 * in COS1 cell lines | Japan | Kamino et al., 1996 [ | |
| p.His163Arg | HL-II | 43–50 years/5 Japanese families, both familial and de novo cases | Abeta42/Abeta40 ratio increased 2 * in COS1 cell lines | Korea | Hong et al., 1997 [ | ||
| p.His163Pro | HL-II | 35 years/de novo EOAD, parkinsonism | The rigid proline might result abnormalities in the border of HL-II and TM-III | Korea | This study | ||
| p.Trp165Gly | TM-III | 34–38 years; EOAD with strong familiar | The small glycine is a rare amino acid in the helix | Japan | Higuchi et al., 2000 [ | ||
| p.Trp165Cys | TM-III | 55 years; memory decline, followed by difficulty in finding ways and had a strong family history of dementia | Increased Aβ42 and decreased Aβ40 production in vitro; elevated Aβ42/Aβ40 ratio | Korea | This study | ||
| 45 years; EOAD, a severe form of the illness, with cerebral and cerebellar atrophies and rapid deterioration | India | Syama et al., 2018 [ | |||||
| p.Ile167del | TM-III | 38 years/familial; EOAD, spastic paraparesis | Deletion might result abnormal conformation in TM-III | China | Jiao et al., 2014 [ | ||
| p.Ser169del | TM-III | EOAD, 42–50 years/familial | Missing –OH group might result a missing H-bound in the TM-III | China | Guo et al., 2010 [ | ||
| p.Leu173Phe | TM-III | 47–50/familial; EOAD with parkinsonism | Elevated Abeta42 levels and Abeta42/Abeta40 ration in neuroblastoma cells | Japan | Kasuga et al. 2009 [ | ||
| 7 | p.Glu184Asp | HL-III | 40s years; EOAD, DLB-like phenotype | The smaller asparatic acid might change the loop conformation | Japan | Yasuda et al. 1997 [ | |
| p.Glu184Gly | HL-III | 40s years; probable autosomal dominant EOAD, frontal variant form | Resulting potential functional alterations; may also disturb the splicing near exon 7 | Thailand | This study | ||
| p.Gly206Ser | TM-IV | 30–35 years/familial, EOAD | Probably pathogenic | Korea | Park et al., 2008 [ | ||
| p.Gly209Arg | TM-IV | 46–53 years, EOAD | Arginine might result extra stress inside the helix and form abnormal hydrogen bonds | Japan | Sugiyama et al., 1999 [ | ||
| p.Gly209Ala | TM-IV | 54 years; MCI with depression, followed by progressive deterioration in verbal and visual memory | The extra –CH3 group in alanine might result extra stress inside the TM-IV region | Korea | This study | ||
| p.Ile213Thr | TM-IV | 42–47 years, EOAD | Increased (1.7 * Abeta) | Japan | Kamino et al., 1996 [ | ||
| p.Gly217Asp | HL-IV | 42–47 years/familial, EOAD | Increased (1.7 * Abeta) | Japan | Takao et al., 2002 [ | ||
| p.Leu226Phe | TM-V | 37 years; de novo, Aβ plaques observed | Results elevated Abeta42/Abeta40 ratio in HEK293 cells | Korea | This study | ||
| p.Leu226Arg | TM-V | 60 years/familial, EOAD | Probably pathogenic | China | Ma et al., 2019 [ | ||
| p.Glu311Arg | TM-V | > 65 years, familial, LOAD | Overproducing toxic Aβ species and enhancing tau phosphorylation | China | Dong et al., 2017 [ | ||
| p.Leu232Pro | TM-V | 37 years/familial; EOAD | The rigid proline might result serious torsion in the TM-V since proline is helix breaker | Korea | This study | ||
| p.Met233Thr | TM-V | 34 years/de novo, EOAD, rapid progressive memory impairment | Elevated (3.2 *) Abeta42/Abeta40 levels in CHO cells | Korea | Park HK et al., 2008 [ | ||
| p.Phe237Ile | TM-V | 35 years/de novo, EOAD, spastic paraparesis | Probably pathogenic | Japan | Sodeyama et al. 2001 [ | ||
| p.Leu248Pro | TM-VI | 42 years/familial, EOAD | Proline is a helix breaker, resulting in torsion in TM-IV | China | Jiao et al., 2014 [ | ||
| p.Leu250Val | TM-VI | 40–51 years/Familial, EOAD, myoclonus, seizures | Probably pathogenic | Japan | Furuya t al., 2003 [ | ||
| 8 | p.Ala260Val | TM-VI | 27–46 years/Familial, EOAD, Pick inclusions | 1.5 * Increased Abeta42/total Abeta in COS1 cells | Japan | Ikeda et al., 1996 [ | |
| p.Gly266Ser | HL-VI(a) | 35–44 years, EOAD, spastic paraparesis, aphasia | Probably pathogenic | Japan | Matsubara-Tsutsui et al., 2002 [ | ||
| p.Arg 269His | HL-VI(a) | 46–67 years/Familial, EOAD, myoclonus | Unknown | Japan | Kamimura el al., 1998 [ | ||
| p.Glu273Ala | HL-VI(a) | 46–67 years/Familial, EOAD, myoclonus | Unknown | Japan | Kamimura el al., 1998 [ | ||
| p.Glu280Ala | HL-VI (MA) | 48–57 years/Familial, EOAD, parkinsonism | Probably pathogenic | Japan | Tanahashi et al., 1996 [ | ||
| p.Glu280Lys | HL-VI (MA) | 48–57; EOAD | Probably pathogenic | Malaysia | This study | ||
| p.Leu282Phe | HL-VI (MA) | 51 years, familial, EOAD | Probably pathogenic | Japan | Hamaguchi et al., 2009 [ | ||
| p.Pro284Leu | HL-VI (MA) | 32 years, cotton-wool plaques and neurofibrillary tangles or amyloid angiopathy in brain | Probably pathogenic | Japan | Tabira et al., 2002 [ | ||
| p.Ala285Val | HL-VI (MA) | 46 year/de novo, EOAD | The Abeta42/total Abeta ratio increased; Abeta40/total Abeta and Abeta38/total Abeta ratios decreased | Korea | This study | ||
| 50.5 years, two families | Japan | Ikeuchi et al., 2008 [ | |||||
| p.Leu286Val | HL-VI (MA) | 47 years | Increases in the Abeta42/total Abeta ratio (1.5 *) and Abeta42/Abeta40 ratio (2.1 *) | Japan | Ikeuchi et al., 2008 [ | ||
| Intron 8 | Exon9 del | - | 47.5 years, in EOAD with spastic paraparesis | elevated Abeta42 levels and Abeta42/40 ratio were observed | Japan | Tabira et al., 2002 [ | |
| 10 | p.Arg352Cys | HL-VI (b) | 56–62 years, EOAD, psychiatric, behavioral symptoms | Cysteine could result intramolecular disulfide bound | China | Jiang et al., 2015 [ | |
| 11 | p.Gly378Glu | TM-VII | 37 years, EOAD, familiar positive | Abeta42/Abeta40 ratio increased (3.2 *) | Japan | Ikeda et al., 1996 [ | |
| p.Leu381Val | TM-VII | 30s years, AD and spastic paraparesis | Abeta42/Abeta40 ratio increased (1.9 *) | Japan | Ikeuchi et al., 2008 [ | ||
| p.Gly384Ala | TM-VII | 31–37 years, EOAD, senile plaques and tangles inside proband’s brain | Beta40 and the Abeta42/Abeta40 ratio decreased and increased significantly. Abeta42/total Abeta ratio increased (3.8 *) | Japan | Kamimura et al. 1998 [ | ||
| p.Leu392Val | TM-VII | 42 years, EOAD | Abeta42/Abeta40 ratio (2.4*). An increase in the Abeta42/Abeta40 ratio (2.9 *) | Japan | Ikeuchi et al. 2008 [ | ||
| p.Asn405Ser | HL-VII | EOAD, the patient has several senile plaques and tangles in the brain | It caused disturbances in the motor neuronal systems, leading to spastic paraparesis | Japan | Yasuda et al., 2000 [ | ||
| p.Gly417Ala | HL-VIII | 37 years; EOAD, parkinsonism, positive familiar | Pathogenic mechanism | Korea | This study | ||
| 12 | p.Ala431Val | HL-VIII | 16 months, t-tau and phospho-Tau levels increased in the CSF, and metabolic deficits were detected in several parts of the brain | Possibly pathogenic | Japan | Matsushita et al., 2002 [ | |
| p.Ala434Thr | HL-VIII | 38 years, EOAD, | Threonine might result extramolecular or intramolecular hydrogen bound | China | Jiao et al., 2014 [ | ||
| p.Thr440del | HL-VIII | 52 years, strong familiar history, EOAD and parkinsonism | Probably pathogenic, may alter the normal amyloid production | Japan | Ishikawa et al., 2005 [ | ||
|
| 4 | p.Arg62Cys | N-term | 49 years, EOAD | Possibly pathogenic, may alter the normal amyloid production. | Korea | This study |
| 40–65 years, EOAD | Iran | Akbari et al., 2013 [ | |||||
| 5 | p.Asn141Tyr | TM-II | 43–49 years, EOAD | No functional data | China | Niu et al., 2014 [ | |
| 6 | p.His169Asn | TM-III | 50 years; de novo | It may result in major helix torsion due to histidine to asparagine substitution | Korea | This study | |
| 62 years; AD, de novo | China | Shi Z et al., 2015 [ | |||||
| 68 years; FTD, progressive nonfluent aphasia, Familial | |||||||
| 63 years/Familial, LOAD | China | Ma et al., 2018 [ | |||||
| 7 | p.Val214Leu | TM-IV | 56–70 years; AD | The extra CH3 group in leucine could result extra stress in the TM-IV region | Korea | This study |
Abbreviation: APP, amyloid precursor protein; PSEN1, presenilin-1; PSEN2, presenilin-2; AD, Alzheimer’s disease; EOAD, early-onset Alzheimer’s disease; LOAD, late-onset Alzheimer’s disease; MCI, mild cognitive impairment; DLB, dementia with Lewy bodies; FTD, frontotemporal dementia; HEK293, human embryonic kidney 293; CHO, Chinese hamster ovary; COS-1, cercopithecus aethiops kidney; TM, transmembrane domain; * multiplication sign.
Figure 2(a) Mutated APP residues identified in Asian countries are shown in different colors. (b) Location of Val669Leu in APP and mutations located near the β-secretase cleavage site. The nearest mutation is the “Swedish APP” mutation. Additional mutations located near the β-secretase cleavage site are the protective Ala673Thr and the pathogenic Ala673Val.
Figure 3Mutated PSEN1 residues identified in the Asian countries are shown in different colors. The predicted membrane topology of PSEN1 with the nine transmembrane domains (green shaded boxes) and boundaries between coding exons is shown. TM, transmembrane domain.
Figure 4Mutated PSEN2 residues identified in the Asian countries are shown in different colors. The predicted membrane topology of PSEN2 with the nine transmembrane domains (yellow shaded boxes) and boundaries between coding exons are shown. TM, transmembrane domain.
Figure 5High-throughput sequencing strategy for identifying gene variants in AD patients. The flow chart illustrates the major steps of the working procedure from patient sample analysis to the identification of mutation.