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Genome-wide association study of autopsy-confirmed Multiple System Atrophy identifies common variants near ZIC1 and ZIC4

Authors :
Manuela Pendziwiat
Margaret E. Flanagan
Marla Gearing
Catriona McLean
Regina Reimann
Günter U. Höglinger
Günther Deuschl
Alan J. Thomas
David Ellinghaus
María José Martí
Allison Beller
Johannes Levin
Ian R. A. Mackenzie
Viktoria Ruf
John Q. Trojanowski
Jonathan D. Glass
Brit Mollenhauer
Franziska Hopfner
Justo Yebenes
Adriano Aguzzi
Lea T. Grinberg
Claire Troakes
Glenda M. Halliday
William K. Scott
Johannes Attems
Charles L. White
Ali H. Rajput
Kathy L. Newell
Owen A. Ross
Ulrich Müller
Charles Duyckaerts
Paula Desplats
Tao Xie
David J. Irwin
Inge Huitinga
Gerard D. Schellenberg
Valentin Evsyukov
Sashika Selvackadunco
Bernardino Ghetti
Per Svenningsson
Ian G. McKeith
Alex Rajput
Manuela Neumann
Ingo Helbig
Edward B. Lee
Ellen Gelpi
Jochen Herms
Tanya Simuni
Matthias Höllerhage
Matthew P. Frosch
Gregor Kuhlenbäumer
Andre Franke
Thomas G. Beach
Annette Peters
Dennis W. Dickson
Shunsuke Koga
Laura Molina Porcel
Vivianna M. Van Deerlin
Dirk C. Keene
Anja K. Tietz
Christine Stadelmann
Claudia Trenkwalder
Teresa Ximelis
William W. Seeley
Radoslav Matěj
Alexander Pantelyat
Alberto Rabano
Gabor G. Kovacs
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

Multiple System Atrophy is a rare neurodegenerative disease with alpha-synuclein aggregation in glial cytoplasmic inclusions and either predominant olivopontocerebellar atrophy or striatonigral degeneration, leading to dysautonomia, parkinsonism, and cerebellar ataxia. One prior genome-wide association study in mainly clinically diagnosed patients with Multiple System Atrophy failed to identify genetic variants predisposing for the disease. Since the clinical diagnosis of Multiple System Atrophy yields a high rate of misdiagnosis when compared to the neuropathological gold standard, we studied common genetic variation in only autopsy-confirmed cases (N = 731) and controls (N = 2,898).The most strongly disease-associated markers were rs16859966 on chromosome 3 (P = 8.6 × 10−7, odds ratio (OR) = 1.58, [95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.32-1.89]), rs7013955 on chromosome 8 (P = 3.7 × 10−6, OR = 1.8 [1.40-2.31]), and rs116607983 on chromosome 4 (P = 4.0 × 10−6, OR = 2.93 [1.86-4.63]), all of which were supported by at least one additional genotyped and several imputed single nucleotide polymorphisms with P-values below 5 × 10−5. The genes closest to the chromosome 3 locus are ZIC1 and ZIC4 encoding the zinc finger proteins of cerebellum 1 and 4 (ZIC1 and ZIC4).Since mutations of ZIC1 and ZIC4 and paraneoplastic autoantibodies directed against ZIC4 are associated with severe cerebellar dysfunction, we conducted immunohistochemical analyses in brain tissue of the frontal cortex and the cerebellum from 24 Multiple System Atrophy patients. Strong immunohistochemical expression of ZIC4 was detected in a subset of neurons of the dentate nucleus in all healthy controls and in patients with striatonigral degeneration, whereas ZIC4 positive neurons were significantly reduced in patients with olivopontocerebellar atrophy.These findings point to a potential ZIC4-mediated vulnerability of neurons in Multiple System Atrophy.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........d159e4e330fd628ef6ab46fa3f884281