Abstract

Background

Progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) is a parkinsonian neurodegenerative tauopathy affecting brain regions involved in motor function, including the basal ganglia, diencephalon and brainstem. While PSP is largely considered to be a sporadic disorder, cases with suspected familial inheritance have been identified and the common MAPT H1haplotype is a major genetic risk factor. Due to the relatively low prevalence of PSP, large sample sizes can be difficult to achieve, and this has limited the ability to detect true genetic risk factors at the genome-wide statistical threshold for significance in GWAS data. With this in mind, in this study we genotyped the genetic variants that displayed the strongest degree of association with PSP (P<1E-4) in the previous GWAS in a new cohort of 533 pathologically-confirmed PSP cases and 1172 controls, and performed a combined analysis with the previous GWAS data.

Results

Our findings validate the known association of loci at MAPT, MOBP, EIF2AK3 and STX6 with risk of PSP, and uncover novel associations with SLCO1A2 (rs11568563) and DUSP10 (rs6687758) variants, both of which were classified as non-significant in the original GWAS.

Conclusions

Resolving the genetic architecture of PSP will provide mechanistic insights and nominate candidate genes and pathways for future therapeutic intervention strategies.

Details

Title
Replication of progressive supranuclear palsy genome-wide association study identifies SLCO1A2 and DUSP10 as new susceptibility loci
Author
Sanchez-Contreras, Monica Y; Kouri, Naomi; Cook, Casey N; Serie, Daniel J; Heckman, Michael G; Finch, NiCole A; Caselli, Richard J; Uitti, Ryan J; Wszolek, Zbigniew K; Graff-Radford, Neill; Petrucelli, Leonard; Li-San, Wang; Schellenberg, Gerard D; Dickson, Dennis W; Rademakers, Rosa; Ross, Owen A
Publication year
2018
Publication date
2018
Publisher
BioMed Central
e-ISSN
17501326
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2072217325
Copyright
Copyright © 2018. This work is licensed under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.