| Literature DB >> 32994401 |
Niccolò Tesi1,2,3, Sven J van der Lee1,2, Marc Hulsman1,2,3, Iris E Jansen1,4, Najada Stringa5,6, Natasja M van Schoor5,6, Philip Scheltens1, Wiesje M van der Flier1,5, Martijn Huisman5,6, Marcel J T Reinders3, Henne Holstege7,8,9.
Abstract
Developing Alzheimer's disease (AD) is influenced by multiple genetic variants that are involved in five major AD-pathways. Per individual, these pathways may differentially contribute to the modification of the AD-risk. The pathways involved in the resilience against AD have thus far been poorly addressed. Here, we investigated to what extent each molecular mechanism associates with (i) the increased risk of AD and (ii) the resilience against AD until extreme old age, by comparing pathway-specific polygenic risk scores (pathway-PRS). We used 29 genetic variants associated with AD to develop pathway-PRS for five major pathways involved in AD. We developed an integrative framework that allows multiple genes to associate with a variant, and multiple pathways to associate with a gene. We studied pathway-PRS in the Amsterdam Dementia Cohort of well-phenotyped AD patients (N = 1895), Dutch population controls from the Longitudinal Aging Study Amsterdam (N = 1654) and our unique 100-plus Study cohort of cognitively healthy centenarians who avoided AD (N = 293). Last, we estimated the contribution of each pathway to the genetic risk of AD in the general population. All pathway-PRS significantly associated with increased AD-risk and (in the opposite direction) with resilience against AD (except for angiogenesis, p < 0.05). The pathway that contributed most to the overall modulation of AD-risk was β-amyloid metabolism (29.6%), which was driven mainly by APOE-variants. After excluding APOE variants, all pathway-PRS associated with increased AD-risk (except for angiogenesis, p < 0.05), while specifically immune response (p = 0.003) and endocytosis (p = 0.0003) associated with resilience against AD. Indeed, the variants in these latter two pathways became the main contributors to the overall modulation of genetic risk of AD (45.5% and 19.2%, respectively). The genetic variants associated with the resilience against AD indicate which pathways are involved with maintained cognitive functioning until extreme ages. Our work suggests that a favorable immune response and a maintained endocytosis pathway might be involved in general neuro-protection, which highlight the need to investigate these pathways, next to β-amyloid metabolism.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32994401 PMCID: PMC7524800 DOI: 10.1038/s41398-020-01018-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Psychiatry ISSN: 2158-3188 Impact factor: 6.222
Fig. 1Boxplots of PRS and pPRS in the different settings.
a (above) shows the PRS including all the 29 known AD-associated variants, with and without APOE variants. As weight for the PRS, we used published variant effect-sizes (Supplementary Table S1). b (central) and c (bottom) show the pPRS for each of the selected molecular pathways, including and excluding APOE variants, respectively. For all plots, risk scores were calculated for AD cases, population subjects, and cognitively healthy centenarians. Then, risk scores were compared between (i) AD cases and population subjects (A vs. P comparison) and (ii) cognitively healthy centenarians and population subjects (C vs. P comparison). For representation, we scaled all PRS and pathway-PRS to be mean = 0 and SD = 1. For the comparison, we used logistic regression models with risk scores as predictors. Annotation: ***p-value of association < 5 × 10−6; **p-value of association < 5 × 10−4; *p-value of association < 5 × 10−2.
Fig. 2Variant-pathways mapping.
Locus: chromosome and position of the AD-associated genetic variants (coordinates are with respect to GRCh37). N. genes: total number of genes associated with each variant according to variant-gene mapping. Variant-gene mapping: Genes: all genes with at least one annotation to the five selected molecular pathways associated with AD. Weight: the weight of the variant-gene mapping. Gene-pathway mapping: immune response, beta-amyloid, endocytosis, cholesterol/lipid, angiogenesis: the weight of each molecular pathway at the gene level. Variant-pathway mapping: summarization of each variant’s effect after combining variant-gene and gene-pathway mappings. Red crosses indicate unmapped genes.
Fig. 3Change in effect-size between association with escaping AD and causing AD for the five pPRSs.
a shows the effect-sizes (log of odds ratio) and the relative 95% confidence intervals of the association of the (p)PRS with both AD-risk and resilience against AD, grouped by pathway. In b, each bar represents the ratio between the effect-size of the association with escaping AD (Resilience effect in a) and with causing AD (Risk effect in a), respectively, with and without APOE variants. Ratios larger than 1 are then indicative of larger effect-size on resilience against AD compared to AD-risk. We then compared the change in effect-size for each pathway when including and excluding APOE variants using t-tests. Annotation: ***p-value of association < 5 × 10−6; **p-value of association < 5 × 10−4; *p-value of association < 5 × 10−2.
Fig. 4Explained variance of each pathway-specific PRS to polygenic risk of AD.
The pie charts represents the explained variance of each pathway-specific PRS to the polygenic risk of AD, including and excluding APOE variants. The contributions are calculated according to (i) our variant-pathway mapping, (ii) the effect-size (log of odds ratio) of each variant from literature (Supplementary Table S1), and (iii) variant’s frequency in our cohort of middle-aged healthy population subjects. We also considered variants with missing variant-pathway mapping (unmapped pathway).