作者
Iris E. Jansen,Jeanne E. Savage,Kyoko Watanabe,Julien Bryois,Dylan M. Williams,Stacy Steinberg,Julia Sealock,Ida Karlsson,Sara Hägg,Lavinia Athanasiu,Nicola Voyle,Petroula Proitsi,Aree Witoelar,Sven Stringer,Dag Aarsland,Ina S. Almdahl,Fred Andersen,Sverre Bergh,Francesco Bettella,Sigurbjörn Björnsson,Anne Brækhus,Geir Bråthen,Christiaan de Leeuw,Rahul S. Desikan,Srdjan Djurovic,Logan Dumitrescu,Tormod Fladby,Timothy J. Hohman,Pálmi V. Jónsson,Steven J. Kiddle,Arvid Rongve,Ingvild Saltvedt,Sigrid Botne Sando,Geir Selbæk,Maryam Shoai,Nathan Skene,Jón Snædal,Eystein Stordal,Ingun Ulstein,Yunpeng Wang,Linda R. White,John Hardy,Jens Hjerling‐Leffler,Patrick F. Sullivan,Wiesje M. van der Flier,Richard Dobson,Lea K. Davis,Hreinn Stefánsson,Kāri Stefánsson,Nancy L. Pedersen,Stephan Ripke,Ole A. Andreassen,Daniëlle Posthuma
摘要
Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is highly heritable and recent studies have identified over 20 disease-associated genomic loci. Yet these only explain a small proportion of the genetic variance, indicating that undiscovered loci remain. Here, we performed a large genome-wide association study of clinically diagnosed AD and AD-by-proxy (71,880 cases, 383,378 controls). AD-by-proxy, based on parental diagnoses, showed strong genetic correlation with AD (rg = 0.81). Meta-analysis identified 29 risk loci, implicating 215 potential causative genes. Associated genes are strongly expressed in immune-related tissues and cell types (spleen, liver, and microglia). Gene-set analyses indicate biological mechanisms involved in lipid-related processes and degradation of amyloid precursor proteins. We show strong genetic correlations with multiple health-related outcomes, and Mendelian randomization results suggest a protective effect of cognitive ability on AD risk. These results are a step forward in identifying the genetic factors that contribute to AD risk and add novel insights into the neurobiology of AD. Genome-wide meta-analysis of clinically diagnosed Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and AD-by-proxy (71,880 AD cases, 383,378 controls) identifies new loci and functional pathways that contribute to AD risk.