[PDF][PDF] Identification of genetic factors that modify clinical onset of Huntington's disease

JM Lee, VC Wheeler, MJ Chao, JPG Vonsattel… - Cell, 2015 - cell.com
JM Lee, VC Wheeler, MJ Chao, JPG Vonsattel, RM Pinto, D Lucente, K Abu-Elneel…
Cell, 2015cell.com
As a Mendelian neurodegenerative disorder, the genetic risk of Huntington's disease (HD) is
conferred entirely by an HTT CAG repeat expansion whose length is the primary
determinant of the rate of pathogenesis leading to disease onset. To investigate the
pathogenic process that precedes disease, we used genome-wide association (GWA)
analysis to identify loci harboring genetic variations that alter the age at neurological onset
of HD. A chromosome 15 locus displays two independent effects that accelerate or delay …
Summary
As a Mendelian neurodegenerative disorder, the genetic risk of Huntington's disease (HD) is conferred entirely by an HTT CAG repeat expansion whose length is the primary determinant of the rate of pathogenesis leading to disease onset. To investigate the pathogenic process that precedes disease, we used genome-wide association (GWA) analysis to identify loci harboring genetic variations that alter the age at neurological onset of HD. A chromosome 15 locus displays two independent effects that accelerate or delay onset by 6.1 years and 1.4 years, respectively, whereas a chromosome 8 locus hastens onset by 1.6 years. Association at MLH1 and pathway analysis of the full GWA results support a role for DNA handling and repair mechanisms in altering the course of HD. Our findings demonstrate that HD disease modification in humans occurs in nature and offer a genetic route to identifying in-human validated therapeutic targets in this and other Mendelian disorders.
PaperClip
cell.com