X-chromosome-wide association study for Alzheimer's disease
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Le Borgne, Julie; Gomez, Lissette; Heikkinen, Sami; Amin, Najaf; Ahmad, Shahzad; Choi, Seung Hoan; Bis, Joshua; Grenier-Boley, Benjamin; Rodriguez, Omar Garcia; Kleineidam, Luca; Young, Juan; Tripathi, Kumar Parijat; Wang, Lily; Varma, Achintya; Campos-Martin, Rafael; Van der Lee, Sven; Damotte, Vincent; De Rojas, Itziar; Palmal, Sagnik; [et al.]Fecha
2025Derechos
© The Author(s) 2024. This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Publicado en
Molecular Psychiatry, 2025, 30(6), 2335-2346
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Nature Publishing Group
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Resumen/Abstract
Due to methodological reasons, the X-chromosome has not been featured in the major genome-wide association studies on Alzheimer’s Disease (AD). To address this and better characterize the genetic landscape of AD, we performed an in-depth XChromosome-Wide Association Study (XWAS) in 115,841 AD cases or AD proxy cases, including 52,214 clinically-diagnosed AD cases, and 613,671 controls. We considered three approaches to account for the different X-chromosome inactivation (XCI) states in females, i.e. random XCI, skewed XCI, and escape XCI. We did not detect any genome-wide significant signals (P ≤ 5 × 10−8) but identified seven X-chromosome-wide significant loci (P ≤ 1.6 × 10−6). The index variants were common for the Xp22.32, FRMPD4, DMD and Xq25 loci, and rare for the WNK3, PJA1, and DACH2 loci. Overall, this well-powered XWAS found no genetic risk factors for AD on the non pseudoautosomal region of the X-chromosome, but it identified suggestive signals warranting further investigations.
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