Identity by descent analysis identifies founder events and links familial and sporadic ALS cases.

NPJ Genom Med

Macquarie University Centre for Motor Neuron Disease Research, Department of Biological Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, Health and Human Sciences, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW Australia.

Published: August 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • ALS is a neurodegenerative disorder leading to paralysis and death, with about 10% of cases having a familial history while others appear sporadic.
  • Research suggests familial ALS mutations may also occur in sporadic cases, indicating some sporadic cases could be unrecognized familial instances.
  • A study on 83 familial ALS cases used identity-by-descent analysis to identify genetic links, revealing unique haplotypes for mutations and helping to connect familial and sporadic cases for better understanding of disease variability.

Article Abstract

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a neurodegenerative disorder characterised by the loss of upper and lower motor neurons resulting in paralysis and eventual death. Approximately 10% of ALS cases have a family history of disease, while the remainder present as apparently sporadic cases. Heritability studies suggest a significant genetic component to sporadic ALS, and although most sporadic cases have an unknown genetic aetiology, some familial ALS mutations have also been found in sporadic cases. This suggests that some sporadic cases may be unrecognised familial cases with reduced disease penetrance in their ancestors. A powerful strategy to uncover a familial link is identity-by-descent (IBD) analysis, which detects genomic regions that have been inherited from a common ancestor. IBD analysis was performed on 83 Australian familial ALS cases from 25 families and three sporadic ALS cases, each of whom carried one of three mutations (p.I114T, p.V149G and p.E101G). We defined five unique 350-SNP haplotypes that carry these mutations in our cohort, indicative of five founder events. This included two founder haplotypes that carry p.I114T; linking familial and sporadic cases. We found that p.E101G arose independently in each family that carries this mutation and linked two families that carry p.V149G. The age of disease onset varied between cases that carried each p.I114T haplotype. Linking families with identical ALS mutations allows for larger sample sizes and increased statistical power to identify putative phenotypic modifiers.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7414871PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41525-020-00139-8DOI Listing

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