Molecular Psychiatry | 2021

Genome-wide association identifies the first risk loci for psychosis in Alzheimer disease

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Psychotic symptoms, defined as the occurrence of delusions or hallucinations, are frequent in Alzheimer disease (AD with psychosis, AD\u2009+\u2009P). AD\u2009+\u2009P affects ~50% of individuals with AD, identifies a subgroup with poor outcomes, and is associated with a greater degree of cognitive impairment and depressive symptoms, compared to subjects without psychosis (AD\u2009−\u2009P). Although the estimated heritability of AD\u2009+\u2009P is 61%, genetic sources of risk are unknown. We report a genome-wide meta-analysis of 12,317 AD subjects, 5445 AD\u2009+\u2009P. Results showed common genetic variation accounted for a significant portion of heritability. Two loci, one in ENPP6 (rs9994623, O.R. (95%CI) 1.16 (1.10, 1.22), p\u2009=\u20091.26\u2009×\u200910−8) and one spanning the 3′-UTR of an alternatively spliced transcript of SUMF1 (rs201109606, O.R. 0.65 (0.56–0.76), p\u2009=\u20093.24\u2009×\u200910−8), had genome-wide significant associations with AD\u2009+\u2009P. Gene-based analysis identified a significant association with APOE, due to the APOE risk haplotype ε4. AD\u2009+\u2009P demonstrated negative genetic correlations with cognitive and educational attainment and positive genetic correlation with depressive symptoms. We previously observed a negative genetic correlation with schizophrenia; instead, we now found a stronger negative correlation with the related phenotype of bipolar disorder. Analysis of polygenic risk scores supported this genetic correlation and documented a positive genetic correlation with risk variation for AD, beyond the effect of ε4. We also document a small set of SNPs likely to affect risk for AD\u2009+\u2009P and AD or schizophrenia. These findings provide the first unbiased identification of the association of psychosis in AD with common genetic variation and provide insights into its genetic architecture.

Volume None
Pages 1 - 15
DOI 10.1038/s41380-021-01152-8
Language English
Journal Molecular Psychiatry

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