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Association of low-frequency and rare coding variants with information processing speed

Authors :
Jan Bressler
Gail Davies
Albert V. Smith
Yasaman Saba
Joshua C. Bis
Xueqiu Jian
Caroline Hayward
Lisa Yanek
Jennifer A. Smith
Saira S. Mirza
Ruiqi Wang
Hieab H. H. Adams
Diane Becker
Eric Boerwinkle
Archie Campbell
Simon R. Cox
Gudny Eiriksdottir
Chloe Fawns-Ritchie
Rebecca F. Gottesman
Megan L. Grove
Xiuqing Guo
Edith Hofer
Sharon L. R. Kardia
Maria J. Knol
Marisa Koini
Oscar L. Lopez
Riccardo E. Marioni
Paul Nyquist
Alison Pattie
Ozren Polasek
David J. Porteous
Igor Rudan
Claudia L. Satizabal
Helena Schmidt
Reinhold Schmidt
Stephen Sidney
Jeannette Simino
Blair H. Smith
Stephen T. Turner
Sven J. van der Lee
Erin B. Ware
Rachel A. Whitmer
Kristine Yaffe
Qiong Yang
Wei Zhao
Vilmundur Gudnason
Lenore J. Launer
Annette L. Fitzpatrick
Bruce M. Psaty
Myriam Fornage
M. Arfan Ikram
Cornelia M. van Duijn
Sudha Seshadri
Thomas H. Mosley
Ian J. Deary
Source :
Translational Psychiatry, Vol 11, Iss 1, Pp 1-7 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group, 2021.

Abstract

Abstract Measures of information processing speed vary between individuals and decline with age. Studies of aging twins suggest heritability may be as high as 67%. The Illumina HumanExome Bead Chip genotyping array was used to examine the association of rare coding variants with performance on the Digit-Symbol Substitution Test (DSST) in community-dwelling adults participating in the Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology (CHARGE) Consortium. DSST scores were available for 30,576 individuals of European ancestry from nine cohorts and for 5758 individuals of African ancestry from four cohorts who were older than 45 years and free of dementia and clinical stroke. Linear regression models adjusted for age and gender were used for analysis of single genetic variants, and the T5, T1, and T01 burden tests that aggregate the number of rare alleles by gene were also applied. Secondary analyses included further adjustment for education. Meta-analyses to combine cohort-specific results were carried out separately for each ancestry group. Variants in RNF19A reached the threshold for statistical significance (p = 2.01 × 10−6) using the T01 test in individuals of European descent. RNF19A belongs to the class of E3 ubiquitin ligases that confer substrate specificity when proteins are ubiquitinated and targeted for degradation through the 26S proteasome. Variants in SLC22A7 and OR51A7 were suggestively associated with DSST scores after adjustment for education for African-American participants and in the European cohorts, respectively. Further functional characterization of its substrates will be required to confirm the role of RNF19A in cognitive function.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
21583188
Volume :
11
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Translational Psychiatry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.b1ae881b412647eaa718f34bae527e8b
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41398-021-01736-6