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Mitochondrial genomic variation in dementia with Lewy bodies: association with disease risk and neuropathological measures

Authors :
Rebecca R. Valentino
Chloe Ramnarine
Michael G. Heckman
Patrick W. Johnson
Alexandra I. Soto-Beasley
Ronald L. Walton
Shunsuke Koga
Koji Kasanuki
Melissa E. Murray
Ryan J. Uitti
Julie A. Fields
Hugo Botha
Vijay K. Ramanan
Kejal Kantarci
Val J. Lowe
Clifford R. Jack
Nilufer Ertekin-Taner
Rodolfo Savica
Jonathan Graff-Radford
Ronald C. Petersen
Joseph E. Parisi
R. Ross Reichard
Neill R. Graff-Radford
Tanis J. Ferman
Bradley F. Boeve
Zbigniew K. Wszolek
Dennis W. Dickson
Owen A. Ross
Source :
Acta Neuropathologica Communications, Vol 10, Iss 1, Pp 1-15 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
BMC, 2022.

Abstract

Abstract Dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) is clinically diagnosed when patients develop dementia less than a year after parkinsonism onset. Age is the primary risk factor for DLB and mitochondrial health influences ageing through effective oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS). Patterns of stable polymorphisms in the mitochondrial genome (mtDNA) alter OXPHOS efficiency and define individuals to specific mtDNA haplogroups. This study investigates if mtDNA haplogroup background affects clinical DLB risk and neuropathological disease severity. 360 clinical DLB cases, 446 neuropathologically confirmed Lewy body disease (LBD) cases with a high likelihood of having DLB (LBD-hDLB), and 910 neurologically normal controls had European mtDNA haplogroups defined using Agena Biosciences MassARRAY iPlex technology. 39 unique mtDNA variants were genotyped and mtDNA haplogroups were assigned to mitochondrial phylogeny. Striatal dopaminergic degeneration, neuronal loss, and Lewy body counts were also assessed in different brain regions in LBD-hDLB cases. Logistic regression models adjusted for age and sex were used to assess associations between mtDNA haplogroups and risk of DLB or LBD-hDLB versus controls in a case-control analysis. Additional appropriate regression models, adjusted for age at death and sex, assessed associations of haplogroups with each different neuropathological outcome measure. No mtDNA haplogroups were significantly associated with DLB or LBD-hDLB risk after Bonferroni correction.Haplogroup H suggests a nominally significant reduced risk of DLB (OR=0.61, P=0.006) but no association of LBD-hDLB (OR=0.87, P=0.34). The haplogroup H observation in DLB was consistent after additionally adjusting for the number of APOE ε4 alleles (OR=0.59, P=0.004). Haplogroup H also showed a suggestive association with reduced ventrolateral substantia nigra neuronal loss (OR=0.44, P=0.033). Mitochondrial haplogroup H may be protective against DLB risk and neuronal loss in substantia nigra regions in LBD-hDLB cases but further validation is warranted.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20515960
Volume :
10
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Acta Neuropathologica Communications
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.3ccebbf408344276a4d599bfa2266e82
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40478-022-01399-4