PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

SLC1A2 variant is associated with essential tremor in Taiwanese population.

  • Shao-wen Yu,
  • Chiung-Mei Chen,
  • Yi-Chun Chen,
  • Chia Wen Chang,
  • Hong-Shiu Chang,
  • Rong-Kuo Lyu,
  • Long-Sun Ro,
  • Yih-Ru Wu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0071919
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 8
p. e71919

Abstract

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Essential tremor (ET), which is one of the most common movement disorders, may lead to severe interference in quality of life. The first genome-wide association study (GWAS) has identified an association of the LINGO1 variant (rs9652490) with ET in Americans and Europeans. Recently, a second GWAS that was performed in a European population has discovered a new variant (rs3794087) of the main glial glutamate transporter (SLC1A2) that increases the risk of ET with an odds ratio of about 1.4. SLC1A2 encodes for the major glial high-affinity glutamate reuptake transporter in the brain and is a potential ET susceptibility gene. Because replication in a different ethnic population is important for validating a finding, we conducted a case-control study to investigate the SLC1A2 variant in an Asian cohort with ET in Taiwan. A total of 542 subjects (273 ET patients and 269 controls) were included. The results showed that rs3794087 was associated with ET among the Taiwanese. The odds ratio was 1.37. Our results were similar to those of the second GWAS of ET in Europeans, and this confirms that SLC1A2 may be a good functional candidate gene for ET. A replication study in another independent population is of importance to validate this association.