TY - JOUR
T1 - Gene Expression Imputation Across Multiple Tissue Types Provides Insight Into the Genetic Architecture of Frontotemporal Dementia and Its Clinical Subtypes
AU - International FTD-Genomics Consortium
AU - Reus, Lianne M.
AU - Pasaniuc, Bogdan
AU - Posthuma, Danielle
AU - Boltz, Toni
AU - Ferrari, Raffaele
AU - Hernandez, Dena G.
AU - Nalls, Michael A.
AU - Rohrer, Jonathan D.
AU - Ramasamy, Adaikalavan
AU - Kwok, John B.J.
AU - Dobson-Stone, Carol
AU - Brooks, William S.
AU - Schofield, Peter R.
AU - Halliday, Glenda M.
AU - Hodges, John R.
AU - Piguet, Olivier
AU - Bartley, Lauren
AU - Thompson, Elizabeth
AU - Hernández, Isabel
AU - Ruiz, Agustín
AU - Boada, Mercè
AU - Borroni, Barbara
AU - Padovani, Alessandro
AU - Cruchaga, Carlos
AU - Cairns, Nigel J.
AU - Benussi, Luisa
AU - Binetti, Giuliano
AU - Ghidoni, Roberta
AU - Forloni, Gianluigi
AU - Galimberti, Daniela
AU - Fenoglio, Chiara
AU - Serpente, Maria
AU - Scarpini, Elio
AU - Clarimón, Jordi
AU - Lleó, Alberto
AU - Blesa, Rafael
AU - Waldö, Maria Landqvist
AU - Nilsson, Karin
AU - Nilsson, Christer
AU - Mackenzie, Ian R.A.
AU - Hsiung, Ging Yuek R.
AU - Mann, David M.A.
AU - Grafman, Jordan
AU - Morris, Christopher M.
AU - Attems, Johannes
AU - Griffiths, Timothy D.
AU - McKeith, Ian G.
AU - Thomas, Alan J.
AU - Pietrini, Pietro
AU - Huey, Edward D.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Society of Biological Psychiatry
PY - 2021/4/15
Y1 - 2021/4/15
N2 - Background: The etiology of frontotemporal dementia (FTD) is poorly understood. To identify genes with predicted expression levels associated with FTD, we integrated summary statistics with external reference gene expression data using a transcriptome-wide association study approach. Methods: FUSION software was used to leverage FTD summary statistics (all FTD: n = 2154 cases, n = 4308 controls; behavioral variant FTD: n = 1337 cases, n = 2754 controls; semantic dementia: n = 308 cases, n = 616 controls; progressive nonfluent aphasia: n = 269 cases, n = 538 controls; FTD with motor neuron disease: n = 200 cases, n = 400 controls) from the International FTD-Genomics Consortium with 53 expression quantitative loci tissue type panels (n = 12,205; 5 consortia). Significance was assessed using a 5% false discovery rate threshold. Results: We identified 73 significant gene–tissue associations for FTD, representing 44 unique genes in 34 tissue types. Most significant findings were derived from dorsolateral prefrontal cortex splicing data (n = 19 genes, 26%). The 17q21.31 inversion locus contained 23 significant associations, representing 6 unique genes. Other top hits included SEC22B (a gene involved in vesicle trafficking), TRGV5, and ZNF302. A single gene finding (RAB38) was observed for behavioral variant FTD. For other clinical subtypes, no significant associations were observed. Conclusions: We identified novel candidate genes (e.g., SEC22B) and previously reported risk regions (e.g., 17q21.31) for FTD. Most significant associations were observed in dorsolateral prefrontal cortex splicing data despite the modest sample size of this reference panel. This suggests that our findings are specific to FTD and are likely to be biologically relevant highlights of genes at different FTD risk loci that are contributing to the disease pathology.
AB - Background: The etiology of frontotemporal dementia (FTD) is poorly understood. To identify genes with predicted expression levels associated with FTD, we integrated summary statistics with external reference gene expression data using a transcriptome-wide association study approach. Methods: FUSION software was used to leverage FTD summary statistics (all FTD: n = 2154 cases, n = 4308 controls; behavioral variant FTD: n = 1337 cases, n = 2754 controls; semantic dementia: n = 308 cases, n = 616 controls; progressive nonfluent aphasia: n = 269 cases, n = 538 controls; FTD with motor neuron disease: n = 200 cases, n = 400 controls) from the International FTD-Genomics Consortium with 53 expression quantitative loci tissue type panels (n = 12,205; 5 consortia). Significance was assessed using a 5% false discovery rate threshold. Results: We identified 73 significant gene–tissue associations for FTD, representing 44 unique genes in 34 tissue types. Most significant findings were derived from dorsolateral prefrontal cortex splicing data (n = 19 genes, 26%). The 17q21.31 inversion locus contained 23 significant associations, representing 6 unique genes. Other top hits included SEC22B (a gene involved in vesicle trafficking), TRGV5, and ZNF302. A single gene finding (RAB38) was observed for behavioral variant FTD. For other clinical subtypes, no significant associations were observed. Conclusions: We identified novel candidate genes (e.g., SEC22B) and previously reported risk regions (e.g., 17q21.31) for FTD. Most significant associations were observed in dorsolateral prefrontal cortex splicing data despite the modest sample size of this reference panel. This suggests that our findings are specific to FTD and are likely to be biologically relevant highlights of genes at different FTD risk loci that are contributing to the disease pathology.
KW - 17q21.31 inversion region
KW - Dorsolateral prefrontal cortex
KW - Expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL)
KW - Frontotemporal dementia
KW - SEC22B
KW - Transcriptome-wide association study
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85101343818&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.biopsych.2020.12.023
DO - 10.1016/j.biopsych.2020.12.023
M3 - Article
C2 - 33637304
AN - SCOPUS:85101343818
SN - 0006-3223
VL - 89
SP - 825
EP - 835
JO - Biological Psychiatry
JF - Biological Psychiatry
IS - 8
ER -