International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Oct 2023)

Potential Modifying Effect of the <i>APOEε4</i> Allele on Age of Onset and Clinical Manifestations in Patients with Early-Onset Alzheimer’s Disease with and without a Pathogenic Variant in <i>PSEN1</i> in a Sample of the Mexican Population

  • César A. Valdez-Gaxiola,
  • Eric Jonathan Maciel-Cruz,
  • Rubiceli Hernández-Peña,
  • Sofía Dumois-Petersen,
  • Frida Rosales-Leycegui,
  • Martha Patricia Gallegos-Arreola,
  • José Miguel Moreno-Ortiz,
  • Luis E. Figuera

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms242115687
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 21
p. 15687

Abstract

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In Alzheimer’s disease (AD), the age of onset (AoO) exhibits considerable variability, spanning from 40 to 90 years. Specifically, individuals diagnosed with AD and exhibiting symptoms prior to the age of 65 are typically classified as early onset (EOAD) cases. Notably, the apolipoprotein E (APOE) ε4 allele represents the most extensively studied genetic risk factor associated with AD. We clinically characterized and genotyped the APOEε4 allele from 101 individuals with a diagnosis of EOAD, and 69 of them were affected carriers of the autosomal dominant fully penetrant PSEN1 variant c.1292C>A (rs63750083, A431E) (PSEN1+ group), while there were 32 patients in which the genetic cause was unknown (PSEN1− group). We found a correlation between the AoO and the APOEε4 allele; patients carrying at least one APOEε4 allele showed delays, in AoO in patients in the PSEN1+ and PSEN1− groups, of 3.9 (p = 0.001) and 8.6 years (p = 0.012), respectively. The PSEN1+ group presented higher frequencies of gait disorders compared to PSEN1− group, and apraxia was more frequent with PSEN1+/APOE4+ than in the rest of the subgroup. This study shows what appears to be an inverse effect of APOEε4 in EOAD patients, as it delays AoO and modifies clinical manifestations.

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