PLoS ONE (Jan 2024)

Genome wide association study of clinical duration and age at onset of sporadic CJD.

  • Holger Hummerich,
  • Helen Speedy,
  • Tracy Campbell,
  • Lee Darwent,
  • Elizabeth Hill,
  • Steven Collins,
  • Christiane Stehmann,
  • Gabor G Kovacs,
  • Michael D Geschwind,
  • Karl Frontzek,
  • Herbert Budka,
  • Ellen Gelpi,
  • Adriano Aguzzi,
  • Sven J van der Lee,
  • Cornelia M van Duijn,
  • Pawel P Liberski,
  • Miguel Calero,
  • Pascual Sanchez-Juan,
  • Elodie Bouaziz-Amar,
  • Jean-Louis Laplanche,
  • Stéphane Haïk,
  • Jean-Phillipe Brandel,
  • Angela Mammana,
  • Sabina Capellari,
  • Anna Poleggi,
  • Anna Ladogana,
  • Maurizio Pocchiari,
  • Saima Zafar,
  • Stephanie Booth,
  • Gerard H Jansen,
  • Aušrinė Areškevičiūtė,
  • Eva Løbner Lund,
  • Katie Glisic,
  • Piero Parchi,
  • Peter Hermann,
  • Inga Zerr,
  • Brian S Appleby,
  • Jiri Safar,
  • Pierluigi Gambetti,
  • John Collinge,
  • Simon Mead

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0304528
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 7
p. e0304528

Abstract

Read online

Human prion diseases are rare, transmissible and often rapidly progressive dementias. The most common type, sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD), is highly variable in clinical duration and age at onset. Genetic determinants of late onset or slower progression might suggest new targets for research and therapeutics. We assembled and array genotyped sCJD cases diagnosed in life or at autopsy. Clinical duration (median:4, interquartile range (IQR):2.5-9 (months)) was available in 3,773 and age at onset (median:67, IQR:61-73 (years)) in 3,767 cases. Phenotypes were successfully transformed to approximate normal distributions allowing genome-wide analysis without statistical inflation. 53 SNPs achieved genome-wide significance for the clinical duration phenotype; all of which were located at chromosome 20 (top SNP rs1799990, pvalue = 3.45x10-36, beta = 0.34 for an additive model; rs1799990, pvalue = 9.92x10-67, beta = 0.84 for a heterozygous model). Fine mapping, conditional and expression analysis suggests that the well-known non-synonymous variant at codon 129 is the obvious outstanding genome-wide determinant of clinical duration. Pathway analysis and suggestive loci are described. No genome-wide significant SNP determinants of age at onset were found, but the HS6ST3 gene was significant (pvalue = 1.93 x 10-6) in a gene-based test. We found no evidence of genome-wide genetic correlation between case-control (disease risk factors) and case-only (determinants of phenotypes) studies. Relative to other common genetic variants, PRNP codon 129 is by far the outstanding modifier of CJD survival suggesting only modest or rare variant effects at other genetic loci.