Genetic association of a cystatin C gene polymorphism with late-onset Alzheimer disease

2000 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Genetic association of a cystatin C gene polymorphism with late-onset Alzheimer disease​
Finckh, U.; von der Kammer, H.; Velden, J.; Michel, T. M.; Andresen, B.; Deng, A. & Zhang, J. et al.​ (2000) 
ARCHIVES OF NEUROLOGY57(11) pp. 1579​-1583​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1001/archneur.57.11.1579 

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Authors
Finckh, U.; von der Kammer, H.; Velden, J.; Michel, Tanja Maria; Andresen, B.; Deng, A.; Zhang, J.; Muller-Thomsen, T.; Zuchowski, K.; Menzer, G.; Mann, U.; Papassotiropoulos, A.; Heun, R.; Zurdel, J.; Holst, F.; Benussi, L.; Stoppe, Gabriela; Reiss, Jochen; Miserez, A. R.; Staehelin, H. B.; Rebeck, G. W.; Hyman, Bradley T.; Binetti, G.; Hock, C.; Growdon, J. H.; Nitsch, R. M.
Abstract
Objective: To determine whether the cystatin C gene (CST3) is genetically associated with late-onset Alzheimer disease (AD). Design: A case-control study with 2 independent study populations of patients with AD and age-matched, cognitively normal control subjects. Setting: The Alzheimer's Disease Research Unit at the University Hospital Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany, for the initial study (n=260). For the independent multicenter study (n=647), an international consortium that included the Massachusetts Alzheimer's Disease Research Center at the Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston; the Scientific Institute for Research and Patient Care, Brescia, Italy; and Alzheimer's research units at the Universities of Baseland Zurich, Switzerland, and Bonn, Goettingen, and Hamburg, Germany. Participants: Five hundred seventeen patients with AD and 390 control subjects. Measures: Molecular testing of the KspI polymorphisms in the 5' flanking region and exon 1 of CST3 and the apolipoprotein E (APOE) genotype. Mini-Mental State Examination scores for both patients with AD and control subjects. Results: Homozygosity for haplotype B of CST3 was significantly associated with late-onset AD in both study populations, with an odds ratio of 3.8 (95% confidence interval, 1.56-9.25) in the combined data set; heterozygosity was not associated with an increased risk. The odds ratios for CST3 B/B increased from 2.6 in those younger than 75 years to 8.8 for those aged 75 years and older. The association of CST3 B/B with AD was independent of APOE epsilon4; both genotypes independently reduced disease-free survival. Conclusions: CST3 is a susceptibility gene for late-onset AD, especially in patients aged 75 years and older. To our knowledge, CST3 B is the first autosomal recessive risk allele in late-onset AD.
Issue Date
2000
Status
published
Publisher
Amer Medical Assoc
Journal
ARCHIVES OF NEUROLOGY 
ISSN
0003-9942
Sponsor
NIA NIH HHS [P50AG05134]; Telethon [E.1084]

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