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Genome-wide analyses as part of the international FTLD-TDP whole-genome sequencing consortium reveals novel disease risk factors and increases support for immune dysfunction in FTLD.

Authors :
Pottier C
Ren Y
Perkerson RB 3rd
Baker M
Jenkins GD
van Blitterswijk M
DeJesus-Hernandez M
van Rooij JGJ
Murray ME
Christopher E
McDonnell SK
Fogarty Z
Batzler A
Tian S
Vicente CT
Matchett B
Karydas AM
Hsiung GR
Seelaar H
Mol MO
Finger EC
Graff C
Öijerstedt L
Neumann M
Heutink P
Synofzik M
Wilke C
Prudlo J
Rizzu P
Simon-Sanchez J
Edbauer D
Roeber S
Diehl-Schmid J
Evers BM
King A
Mesulam MM
Weintraub S
Geula C
Bieniek KF
Petrucelli L
Ahern GL
Reiman EM
Woodruff BK
Caselli RJ
Huey ED
Farlow MR
Grafman J
Mead S
Grinberg LT
Spina S
Grossman M
Irwin DJ
Lee EB
Suh E
Snowden J
Mann D
Ertekin-Taner N
Uitti RJ
Wszolek ZK
Josephs KA
Parisi JE
Knopman DS
Petersen RC
Hodges JR
Piguet O
Geier EG
Yokoyama JS
Rissman RA
Rogaeva E
Keith J
Zinman L
Tartaglia MC
Cairns NJ
Cruchaga C
Ghetti B
Kofler J
Lopez OL
Beach TG
Arzberger T
Herms J
Honig LS
Vonsattel JP
Halliday GM
Kwok JB
White CL 3rd
Gearing M
Glass J
Rollinson S
Pickering-Brown S
Rohrer JD
Trojanowski JQ
Van Deerlin V
Bigio EH
Troakes C
Al-Sarraj S
Asmann Y
Miller BL
Graff-Radford NR
Boeve BF
Seeley WW
Mackenzie IRA
van Swieten JC
Dickson DW
Biernacka JM
Rademakers R
Source :
Acta neuropathologica [Acta Neuropathol] 2019 Jun; Vol. 137 (6), pp. 879-899. Date of Electronic Publication: 2019 Feb 09.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Frontotemporal lobar degeneration with neuronal inclusions of the TAR DNA-binding protein 43 (FTLD-TDP) represents the most common pathological subtype of FTLD. We established the international FTLD-TDP whole-genome sequencing consortium to thoroughly characterize the known genetic causes of FTLD-TDP and identify novel genetic risk factors. Through the study of 1131 unrelated Caucasian patients, we estimated that C9orf72 repeat expansions and GRN loss-of-function mutations account for 25.5% and 13.9% of FTLD-TDP patients, respectively. Mutations in TBK1 (1.5%) and other known FTLD genes (1.4%) were rare, and the disease in 57.7% of FTLD-TDP patients was unexplained by the known FTLD genes. To unravel the contribution of common genetic factors to the FTLD-TDP etiology in these patients, we conducted a two-stage association study comprising the analysis of whole-genome sequencing data from 517 FTLD-TDP patients and 838 controls, followed by targeted genotyping of the most associated genomic loci in 119 additional FTLD-TDP patients and 1653 controls. We identified three genome-wide significant FTLD-TDP risk loci: one new locus at chromosome 7q36 within the DPP6 gene led by rs118113626 (p value = 4.82e - 08, OR = 2.12), and two known loci: UNC13A, led by rs1297319 (p value = 1.27e - 08, OR = 1.50) and HLA-DQA2 led by rs17219281 (p value = 3.22e - 08, OR = 1.98). While HLA represents a locus previously implicated in clinical FTLD and related neurodegenerative disorders, the association signal in our study is independent from previously reported associations. Through inspection of our whole-genome sequence data for genes with an excess of rare loss-of-function variants in FTLD-TDP patients (n ≥ 3) as compared to controls (n = 0), we further discovered a possible role for genes functioning within the TBK1-related immune pathway (e.g., DHX58, TRIM21, IRF7) in the genetic etiology of FTLD-TDP. Together, our study based on the largest cohort of unrelated FTLD-TDP patients assembled to date provides a comprehensive view of the genetic landscape of FTLD-TDP, nominates novel FTLD-TDP risk loci, and strongly implicates the immune pathway in FTLD-TDP pathogenesis.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1432-0533
Volume :
137
Issue :
6
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Acta neuropathologica
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
30739198
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00401-019-01962-9