Whole Genome Sequence Analysis Revealed Novel Subjective Cognitive Decline-associated Genes in 10,763 Chinese.
Wang M, Sun L, Xu X et al.
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Abstract
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Subjective cognitive decline (SCD) is widely regarded as a potential preclinical stage of Alzheimer's disease (AD), yet its genetic basis remains poorly understood. To address this gap, we investigated genetic biomarkers associated with SCD using whole-genome sequencing (WGS) in 10,763 Chinese participants from the Healthy Zhejiang One Million People Cohort (HOPE Cohort). The discovery stage included 9284 samples, with 1479 samples used for validation. Using a two-stage design, we systematically investigated both common and rare variants associated with SCD. In rare variant analyses, we identified and replicated an association between the upstream region of SEPHS2 and SCD. SEPHS2 is involved in selenophosphate synthesis, and a Mendelian randomization analysis reveals that its expression levels in both blood and brain cerebellum are associated with AD. Additionally, we identified CLVS2, which encodes a protein primarily expressed in neuronal cells, as a potential regulator for SCD based on missense rare variants. Multi-omics evidence suggests that both SEPHS2 and CLVS2 may play roles in neurodegenerative diseases. For common variants, we validated 8 known loci related to cognitive decline, 3 of which originated from the only existing SCD genetic study conducted under a migraine background. Overall, our WGS-based study fills the gap in SCD research by providing vital genetic evidence from an East Asian population and offers insights into the pathogenic mechanisms of SCD.
9,284 Chinese ancestry individuals
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