Frontiers in Psychiatry (Nov 2019)

Exploring the Causal Pathway From Telomere Length to Alzheimer’s Disease: An Update Mendelian Randomization Study

  • Kai Gao,
  • Kai Gao,
  • Chen Wei,
  • Jin Zhu,
  • Xin Wang,
  • Guoqing Chen,
  • Yangyang Luo,
  • Dai Zhang,
  • Dai Zhang,
  • Dai Zhang,
  • Weihua Yue,
  • Hao Yu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2019.00843
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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Increasing evidence shows that telomere length shortening is associated with the risk for Alzheimer’s disease (AD), pointing to a potential modifiable target for prevention. However, the causality of this association is still not clear. To investigate the causal relationship between telomere length and AD, we use two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) to assess potential causal inference. We used summary-level data for telomere length (9,190 participants) and AD (71,880 cases and 383,378 controls). We performed two-sample MR analysis with single nucleotide polymorphisms previously identified to be associated with telomere length. The MR analyses were conducted using the inverse-variance-weighted method and complemented with the maximum likelihood, weighted median, weighted mode approaches. MR evidence suggested that shorter telomere length was causally associated with a higher risk for AD (inverse-variance weighted estimate of odds ratio (OR): 1.03 per SD decrease of telomere length, P=1.21×10−2). The maximum likelihood, weighted median, weighted mode yielded a similar pattern of effects. The results were similar in sensitivity analyses. Using genetic instruments identified from large-scale genome-wide association study, robust evidence supports a causal role of telomere length shortening with increased risk of AD.

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