Parkinson Disease (PD) is a complex neurodegenerative disorder characterized by large genetic heterogeneity and missing heritability. Since the genetic background of PD can partly vary among ethnicities and neurological scales have been scarcely investigated in a PD setting, we performed an exploratory Whole Exome Sequencing (WES) analysis of 123 PD patients from mainland Italy, investigating scales assessing motor (UPDRS), cognitive (MoCA), and other non-motor symptoms (NMS). We performed variant prioritization, followed by targeted association testing of prioritized variants in 446 PD cases and 211 controls. Then we ran Exome-Wide Association Scans (EWAS) within sequenced PD cases (N = 113), testing both motor and non-motor PD endophenotypes, as well as their associations with Polygenic Risk Scores (PRS) influencing brain subcortical volumes. We identified a variant associated with PD, rs201330591 in GTF2H2 (5q13; alternative T allele: OR [CI] = 8.16[1.08; 61.52], FDR = 0.048), which was not replicated in an independent cohort of European ancestry (1,148 PD cases, 503 controls). In the EWAS, polygenic analyses revealed statistically significant multivariable associations of amygdala- [β(SE) = -0.039(0.013); FDR = 0.039] and caudate-PRS [0.043(0.013); 0.028] with motor symptoms. All subcortical PRSs in a multivariable model notably increased the variance explained in motor (adjusted-R2 = 38.6%), cognitive (32.2%) and other non-motor symptoms (28.9%), compared to baseline models (~20%). Although, the small sample size warrants further replications, these findings suggest shared genetic architecture between PD symptoms and subcortical structures, and provide interesting clues on PD genetic and neuroimaging features.

Whole Exome Sequencing Study of Parkinson Disease and Related Endophenotypes in the Italian Population

Gialluisi A;
2020-01-01

Abstract

Parkinson Disease (PD) is a complex neurodegenerative disorder characterized by large genetic heterogeneity and missing heritability. Since the genetic background of PD can partly vary among ethnicities and neurological scales have been scarcely investigated in a PD setting, we performed an exploratory Whole Exome Sequencing (WES) analysis of 123 PD patients from mainland Italy, investigating scales assessing motor (UPDRS), cognitive (MoCA), and other non-motor symptoms (NMS). We performed variant prioritization, followed by targeted association testing of prioritized variants in 446 PD cases and 211 controls. Then we ran Exome-Wide Association Scans (EWAS) within sequenced PD cases (N = 113), testing both motor and non-motor PD endophenotypes, as well as their associations with Polygenic Risk Scores (PRS) influencing brain subcortical volumes. We identified a variant associated with PD, rs201330591 in GTF2H2 (5q13; alternative T allele: OR [CI] = 8.16[1.08; 61.52], FDR = 0.048), which was not replicated in an independent cohort of European ancestry (1,148 PD cases, 503 controls). In the EWAS, polygenic analyses revealed statistically significant multivariable associations of amygdala- [β(SE) = -0.039(0.013); FDR = 0.039] and caudate-PRS [0.043(0.013); 0.028] with motor symptoms. All subcortical PRSs in a multivariable model notably increased the variance explained in motor (adjusted-R2 = 38.6%), cognitive (32.2%) and other non-motor symptoms (28.9%), compared to baseline models (~20%). Although, the small sample size warrants further replications, these findings suggest shared genetic architecture between PD symptoms and subcortical structures, and provide interesting clues on PD genetic and neuroimaging features.
2020
2020
https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2019.01362
Parkinson disease; cognitive performance; genetics; motor symptoms; non-motor symptoms; polygenic scores; subcortical volumes; whole exome sequencing.
Gialluisi, A; Reccia, Mg; Tirozzi, A; Nutile, T; Lombardi, A; De Sanctis, C; International Parkinson's Disease Genomic Consortium, (IPDGC); Varanese, ...espandi
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11383/2125183
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