April 3, 2011
Alzheimer’s Studies Show Genetic Links

By GINA KOLATA

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/04/health/04alzheimer.html

 The two largest studies of Alzheimer’s disease have led to the discovery of no 
fewer than five genes that provide intriguing new clues to why it strikes and 
how it progresses.

Researchers say the studies, which analyzed the genes of more than 50,000 
people in the United States and Europe, leave little doubt that the five genes 
make the disease more likely in the elderly and have something important to 
reveal about the disease’s process.

“The level of evidence is very, very strong,” said Dr. Michael Boehnke, a 
professor of biostatistics at the University of Michigan and an outside adviser 
on the research. The two studies are being published Monday in the journal 
Nature Genetics.

By themselves, the new genes are not nearly as important a factor as APOE, a 
gene discovered in 1995 that greatly increases risk for the disease: by 400 
percent if a person inherits a copy from one parent, by 1,000 percent if from 
both parents.

In contrast, each of the new genes increases risk by no more than 10 to 15 
percent; for that reason, they will not be used to decide if a person is likely 
to develop Alzheimer’s. APOE, which is involved in metabolizing cholesterol, 
“is in a class of its own,” said Dr. Rudolph Tanzi, a neurology professor at 
Harvard Medical School and an author of one of the papers.

But researchers say that for understanding the disease and developing new 
therapies, a slight increase in risk is more than sufficient. And like APOE, 
some of the newly discovered genes appear to be involved with cholesterol. 
Others are linked to inflammation or the transport of molecules inside cells.

For years , there have been unproven but persistent hints that cholesterol and 
inflammation are part of the disease process. People with high cholesterol are 
more likely to get the disease. Strokes and head injuries, which make 
Alzheimer’s more likely, also cause brain inflammation.

The new discoveries double the number of genes known to be involved in 
Alzheimer’s, to 10 from 5. One of the papers’ 155 authors, Dr. Richard Mayeux, 
chairman of neurology at Columbia University Medical Center, said the findings 
would “open up the field.”

And an expert who was not part of the studies, Dr. Nelson B. Freimer, who 
directs the U.C.L.A. Center for Neurobehavioral Genetics, said there were now 
enough unequivocal genes for Alzheimer’s disease that researchers could make 
real progress in figuring out its biology. “This is a big, solid step,” he said.

Of the 10 genes now associated with Alzheimer’s in old age, four were found in 
the past few years and are confirmed by the new studies. APOE may have other 
roles in the disease, perhaps involved in clearing the brain of chemicals that 
pile up in plaques, the barnacle-like particles that dot the brain of 
Alzheimer’s patients and are the one unique pathological feature of the disease.

It is known that one of the first signs of Alzheimer’s disease is an 
accumulation of amyloid beta, or a-beta, a protein that forms plaques. And it 
is known that later in the disease, twisted and tangled proteins known as tau 
appear in dead and dying nerve cells.

But what is not known is why a-beta starts to accrue, why the brains of people 
with Alzheimer’s cannot get rid of its excess, or what is the link between 
amyloid and tau.

One of the new papers, by American investigators, analyzed the genes of 54,000 
people, some with Alzheimer’s and others of the same age but without the 
disease. They found four new genes.

The other paper is by researchers in Britain, France and other European 
countries with contributions from the United States. They confirmed the genes 
found by the American researchers and added one more gene.

The American study got started about three years ago when Gerard D. 
Schellenberg, a pathology professor at the University of Pennsylvania, went to 
the National Institutes of Health with a complaint and a proposal. Individual 
research groups had been doing their own genome studies but not getting much 
because no one center had enough subjects.

In an interview, Dr. Schellenberg said he told Dr. Richard J. Hodes, director 
of the National Institute on Aging, that the small genomic studies had to stop, 
and Dr. Hodes agreed.

These days, Dr. Hodes said, “the old model in which researchers jealously 
guarded their data is no longer applicable.”

So Dr. Schellenberg set out to gather all the data he could on Alzheimer’s 
patients and on healthy people of the same ages. The idea was to compare one 
million positions on each person’s genome to determine whether some genes were 
more common in those who had Alzheimer’s.

“I spent a lot of time being nice to people on the phone,” Dr. Schellenberg 
said.

He got what he wanted: nearly every Alzheimer’s center and Alzheimer’s 
geneticist in the country cooperated. Dr. Schellenberg and his colleagues used 
the mass of genetic data to do an analysis and find the genes and then, using 
two different populations, to confirm that the same genes were conferring risk 
in those groups. That helped assure the  investigators that they were not 
looking at a chance association.

It was a huge effort, Dr. Mayeux said. Many medical centers had Alzheimer’s 
patients’ tissue sitting in freezers. They had to extract the DNA and do genome 
scans.

“One of my job was to make sure the Alzheimer’s cases really were cases,” Dr. 
Mayeux said — “that they had used some reasonable criteria” for diagnosis. “And 
I had to be sure that people who were unaffected really were unaffected.”

But once the project got going, “we all realized we have to make this happen, 
it just had to happen,” he continued. “Everyone wanted to collaborate.”

Meanwhile, the European group, led by Dr. Julie Williams of the School of 
Medicine at Cardiff University, was engaged in a similar effort. Dr. 
Schellenberg said the two groups compared their results and were reassured that 
they were largely finding the same genes.

“If there were mistakes, we wouldn’t see the same things,” he added.

Now the European and American groups are pooling their data to do an enormous 
study, looking for genes in the combined samples.

“We are upping the sample size,” Dr. Schellenberg said. “We are pretty sure 
more stuff will pop out.”

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