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GWAS Study

Ethnicity- and sex-specific genome wide association study on Parkinson's disease.

Park KW, Ryu HS, Shin E et al.

37805635 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
6050 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

PK
Park KW
RH
Ryu HS
SE
Shin E
PY
Park Y
JS
Jeon SR
KS
Kim SY
KJ
Kim JS
KS
Koh SB
CS
Chung SJ
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Most previous genome-wide association studies (GWASs) on Parkinson's disease (PD) focus on the European population. There are several sex-specific clinical differences in PD, but little is known about its genetic background. We aimed to perform an ethnicity-specific and sex-specific GWAS on PD in the Korean population. A total of 1050 PD patients and 5000 controls were included. For primary analysis, we performed a GWAS using a logistic additive model adjusted for age and sex. The same statistical models were applied to sex-specific analyses. Genotyping was performed using a customized microarray chip optimized for the Korean population. Nine single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) including four in the SNCA locus and three from the PARK16 locus were associated with PD in Koreans. The rs34778348 in the LRRK2 locus showed a strong association, though failed to pass cluster quality control. There were no notable genome-wide significant markers near the MAPT or GBA1 loci. In the female-only analysis, rs34778348 in LRRK2 and the four other SNPs in the SNCA showed a strong association with PD. In the male-only analysis, no SNP surpassed the genome-wide significance threshold under Bonferroni correction; however, the most significant signal was rs708726 in the PARK16 locus. This ethnicity- and sex-specific GWAS on PD implicate the pan-ethnic effect of SNCA, the universal but East-Asian inclined effect of PARK16, the East Asian-specific role of LRRK2 G2385R variants, and the possible disproportionate effect of SNCA and PARK16 between sexes for PD susceptibility. These findings suggest the different genetic contributions to sporadic PD in terms of ethnicity and sex.

1,050 East Asian ancestry cases, 5,000 East Asian ancestry controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

6050
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
East Asian
Ancestry
Republic of Korea
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

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