Allelic expression of APOE in human brain: Effects of epsilon status and promoter haplotypes

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Abstract

The E4 haplotype of APOE is the only undisputed genetic risk factor for late-onset Alzheimer's disease (LOAD). It has been proposed that at least two other polymorphisms in the promoter of the APOE gene (-219G>T and -491A>T) might also contribute to disease susceptibility, and modulate the impact of structural changes in the ApoE protein, by altering its expression. In order to assess the extent of cis-acting influences on APOE expression in human brain, highly quantitative measures of allele discrimination were applied to cortical RNA from individuals heterozygous for the epsilon alleles. A small, but significant, increase in the expression of E4 allele was observed relative to that of the E3 and E2 alleles (P<0.0001). Similar differences were observed in brain tissue from confirmed LOAD subjects, and between cortical regions BA10 (frontopolar) and BA20 (inferior temporal). Stratification of E4/E3 allelic expression ratios according to heterozygosity for the -219G>T promoter polymorphism revealed significantly lower relative expression of haplotypes containing the -219T allele (P=0.02). Our data indicate that, in human brain, most of the cis-acting variance in APOE expression is accounted for by the E4 haplotype, but there are additional, small, cis-acting influences associated with promoter genotype. © Oxford University Press 2004; all rights reserved.

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Bray, N. J., Jehu, L., Moskvina, V., Buxbaum, J. D., Dracheva, S., Haroutunian, V., … O’Donovan, M. C. (2004). Allelic expression of APOE in human brain: Effects of epsilon status and promoter haplotypes. Human Molecular Genetics, 13(22), 2885–2892. https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddh299

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