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TYROBP genetic variants in early-onset Alzheimer's disease. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers conducted exome sequencing on 45 early-onset Alzheimer's disease (EOAD) patients to discover new genes linked to the condition, identifying 29 potential candidate genes.
  • Out of these, the gene TYROBP, which has prior associations with Alzheimer's, was selected for further study due to its significance.
  • The study found rare mutations in TYROBP in 9 out of 1110 EOAD patients, indicating these variations may increase EOAD risk, and showed that one specific mutation reduced TREM2 levels, a known Alzheimer's risk factor.

Article Abstract

We aimed to identify new candidate genes potentially involved in early-onset Alzheimer's disease (EOAD). Exome sequencing was conducted on 45 EOAD patients with either a family history of Alzheimer's disease (AD, <65 years) or an extremely early age at the onset (≤55 years) followed by multiple variant filtering according to different modes of inheritance. We identified 29 candidate genes potentially involved in EOAD, of which the gene TYROBP, previously implicated in AD, was selected for genetic and functional follow-up. Using 3 patient cohorts, we observed rare coding TYROBP variants in 9 out of 1110 EOAD patients, whereas no such variants were detected in 1826 controls (p = 0.0001), suggesting that at least some rare TYROBP variants might contribute to EOAD risk. Overexpression of the p.D50_L51ins14 TYROBP mutant led to a profound reduction of TREM2 expression, a well-established risk factor for AD. This is the first study supporting a role for genetic variation in TYROBP in EOAD, with in vitro support for a functional effect of the p.D50_L51ins14 TYROBP mutation on TREM2 expression.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5159294PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neurobiolaging.2016.07.028DOI Listing

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