7 research outputs found

    The Amyloid Precursor Protein Locus and Very-Late-Onset Alzheimer Disease

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    Although mutations in the amyloid-β precursor protein (APP) gene are known to confer high risk of Alzheimer disease (AD) to a small percentage of families in which it has early onset, convincing evidence of a major role for the APP locus in late-onset AD has not been forthcoming. In this report, we have used a covariate-based affected-sib-pair linkage method to analyze the chromosome 21 clinical and genetic data obtained on affected sibships by the National Institute of Mental Health Alzheimer Disease Genetics Initiative. The baseline model (without covariates) gave a LOD score of 0.02, which increases to 1.43 when covariates representing the additive effects of E2 and E4 are added. Larger increases in LOD scores were found when age at last examination/death (LOD score 5.54; P=.000002) or age at onset plus disease duration (LOD score 5.63; P=.000006) were included in the linkage model. We conclude that the APP locus may predispose to AD in the very elderly

    A Second Locus for Very-Late-Onset Alzheimer Disease: A Genome Scan Reveals Linkage to 20p and Epistasis between 20p and the Amyloid Precursor Protein Region

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    We used a covariate-based linkage method to reanalyze genome scan data from affected sibships collected by the Alzheimer Disease (AD) Genetics Initiative of the National Institute of Mental Health. As reported in an earlier article, the amyloid-β precursor protein (APP) region is strongly linked to affected sib pairs of the oldest current age (i.e., age either at last exam or at death) who lack E4 alleles at the apolipoprotein E (ApoE) locus. We now report that a region on 20p shows the same pattern. A model that includes current age and the number of E2 alleles as covariates gives a LOD score of 4.1. The signal on 20p is near the location of the gene coding for cystatin-C, previously shown to be associated with late-onset AD and to codeposit with APP in the brains of patients with AD. Two-locus analysis provides evidence of strong epistasis between 20p and the APP region, limited to the oldest age group and to those lacking ApoE4 alleles. We speculate that high-risk polymorphisms in both regions produce a biological interaction between these two proteins that increases susceptibility to a very-late-onset form of AD

    Genome scan for familial abdominal aortic aneurysm using sex and family history as covariates suggests genetic heterogeneity and identifies linkage to chromosome 19q13.

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    BACKGROUND: Abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) is a relatively common disease, with 1% to 2% of the population harboring aneurysms. Genetic risk factors are likely to contribute to the development of AAAs, although no such risk factors have been identified. METHODS AND RESULTS: We performed a whole-genome scan of AAA using affected-relative-pair (ARP) linkage analysis that includes covariates to allow for genetic heterogeneity. We found strong evidence of linkage (logarithm of odds [LOD] score=4.64) to a region near marker D19S433 at 51.88 centimorgans (cM) on chromosome 19 with 36 families (75 ARPs) when including sex and the number of affected first-degree relatives of the proband (N(aff)) as covariates. We then genotyped 83 additional families for the same markers and typed additional markers for all families and obtained a LOD score of 4.75 (P=0.00014) with sex, N(aff), and their interaction as covariates near marker D19S416 (58.69 cM). We also identified a region on chromosome 4 with a LOD score of 3.73 (P=0.0012) near marker D4S1644 using the same covariate model as for chromosome 19. CONCLUSIONS: Our results provide evidence for genetic heterogeneity and the presence of susceptibility loci for AAA on chromosomes 19q13 and 4q31

    Intracranial Aneurysms in Finnish Families: Confirmation of Linkage and Refinement of the Interval to Chromosome 19q13.3

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    We recently reported a two-stage genomewide screen of 48 sib pairs affected with intracranial aneurysms (IAs) that revealed suggestive linkage to chromosome 19q13, with a LOD score of 2.58. The region supporting linkage spanned ∼22 cM. Here, we report a follow-up study of the locus at 19q13, with a sample size expanded to 139 affected sib pairs, along with 83 other affected relative pairs (222 affected relative pairs in total). Suggestive linkage was observed in both independent sample sets, and linkage was significant in the combined set at 70 cM (LOD score 3.50; P=.00006) and at 80 cM (LOD score 3.93; P=.00002). Linkage was highly significant at 70 cM (LOD score 5.70; P=.000001) and at 80 cM (LOD score 3.99; P=.00005) when a covariate measuring the number of affected individuals in the nuclear family was included. To evaluate further the contribution to the linkage signal from families with more than two affected relatives, we performed model-based linkage analysis with a recessive model and a range of penetrances, and we obtained maximum linkage at 70 cM (LOD score 3.16; P=.00007) with a penetrance of 0.3. We then estimated location by using GENEFINDER. The most likely location for a gene predisposing to IAs in the Finnish population is in a region with a 95% confidence interval of 11.6 cM (P=.00007) centered 2.0 cM proximal to D19S246
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