DAPK1 variants are associated with Alzheimer's disease and allele-specific expression

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Abstract

Genetic factors play an important role in the etiology of late-onset Alzheimer's disease (LOAD). We tested gene-centric single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) on chromosome 9 and identified two SNPs in the death-associated protein kinase, DAPK1, that show significant association with LOAD. SNP rs4878104 was significantly associated with LOAD in our discovery case-control sample set (WU) and replicated in each of two initial validation case-control sample sets (P < 0.05, UK1, SD). The risk-allele frequency of this SNP showed a similar direction in three other case-control sample sets. A meta-analysis of the six sample sets combined, totaling 2012 cases and 2336 controls, showed an allelic P-value of 0.0016 and an odds ratio (OR) of 0.87 (95%CI: 0.79-0.95). Minor allele homozygotes had a consistently lower risk than major allele homozygotes in the discovery and initial two replication sample sets, which remained significant in the meta-analysis of all six sample sets (OR=0.7, 95%CI: 0.58-0.85), whereas the risk for heterozygous subjects was not significantly different from that of major allele homozygotes. A second SNP, rs4877365, which is in high linkage disequilibrium with rs4878104 (r2 = 0.64), was also significantly associated with LOAD (meta P = 0.0017 in the initial three sample sets). Furthermore, DAPK1 transcripts show differential allelic gene expression, and both rs4878104 and rs4877365 were significantly associated with DAPK1 allele-specific expression (P = 0.015 to <0.0001). These data suggest that genetic variation in DAPK1 modulates susceptibility to LOAD. © 2006 Oxford University Press.

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Li, Y., Grupe, A., Rowland, C., Nowotny, P., Kauwe, J. S. K., Smemo, S., … Goate, A. (2006). DAPK1 variants are associated with Alzheimer’s disease and allele-specific expression. Human Molecular Genetics, 15(17), 2560–2568. https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddl178

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