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A genome-wide association study implicates the APOE locus in nonpathological cognitive ageing

Authors :
John M. Starr
Lawrence J. Whalley
Chandra A. Reynolds
William Ollier
Catherine Murray
Nancy L. Pedersen
Alan J. Gow
Paul Haggarty
Lorna M. Lopez
Geraldine McNeill
Antony Payton
Helen C. Fox
David J. Porteous
Andrew Pickles
Paul Redmond
Ornit Chiba-Falek
A. D. Roses
Neil Pendleton
Michael A. Horan
Michael W. Lutz
Albert Tenesa
Ross Henderson
Gail Davies
Michelle Luciano
Chris P. Ponting
Peter M. Visscher
Alison Pattie
Xiayi Ke
Sunita Saith
Colton Linnertz
Ian J. Deary
Janie Corley
David C. Liewald
Sarah E. Harris
Helen M. Knight
Source :
Mol Psychiatry
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Cognitive decline is a feared aspect of growing old. It is a major contributor to lower quality of life and loss of independence in old age. We investigated the genetic contribution to individual differences in nonpathological cognitive ageing in five cohorts of older adults. We undertook a genome-wide association analysis using 549 692 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 3511 unrelated adults in the Cognitive Ageing Genetics in England and Scotland (CAGES) project. These individuals have detailed longitudinal cognitive data from which phenotypes measuring each individual's cognitive changes were constructed. One SNP - rs2075650, located in TOMM40 (translocase of the outer mitochondrial membrane 40 homolog) - had a genome-wide significant association with cognitive ageing (P=2.5 × 10 -8). This result was replicated in a meta-analysis of three independent Swedish cohorts (P=2.41 × 10 -6). An Apolipoprotein E (APOE) haplotype (adjacent to TOMM40), previously associated with cognitive ageing, had a significant effect on cognitive ageing in the CAGES sample (P=2.18 × 10 -8; females, P=1.66 × 10 -11; males, P=0.01). Fine SNP mapping of the TOMM40/APOE region identified both APOE (rs429358; P=3.66 × 10 -11) and TOMM40 (rs11556505; P=2.45 × 10 -8) as loci that were associated with cognitive ageing. Imputation and conditional analyses in the discovery and replication cohorts strongly suggest that this effect is due to APOE (rs429358). Functional genomic analysis indicated that SNPs in the TOMM40/APOE region have a functional, regulatory non-protein-coding effect. The APOE region is significantly associated with nonpathological cognitive ageing. The identity and mechanism of one or multiple causal variants remain unclear. © 2014 Macmillan Publishers Limited.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Mol Psychiatry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f39546830d3f02d8c7d70a4963e98759
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/mp.2012.159