Publication | Open Access
Mosaic Loss of Chromosome Y in Blood Is Associated with Alzheimer Disease
252
Citations
52
References
2016
Year
Sporadic Alzheimer DiseaseAgingCytogeneticsGeneticsGenetic EpidemiologyEpidemiology Of AgingMosaic LossAlzheimer's DiseaseNeurologyAging-associated DiseasePublic HealthVariant InterpretationChromosome YGenetic FactorAlzheimer DiseaseRisk FactorsEpidemiologyNeurodegenerative DiseasesGenetic DisorderDementiaChromosome BiologyNeuroscienceShorter Life ExpectancyTobacco SmokingMedicine
Men have a shorter life expectancy compared with women but the underlying factor(s) are not clear. Late-onset, sporadic Alzheimer disease (AD) is a common and lethal neurodegenerative disorder and many germline inherited variants have been found to influence the risk of developing AD. Our previous results show that a fundamentally different genetic variant, i.e., lifetime-acquired loss of chromosome Y (LOY) in blood cells, is associated with all-cause mortality and an increased risk of non-hematological tumors and that LOY could be induced by tobacco smoking. We tested here a hypothesis that men with LOY are more susceptible to AD and show that LOY is associated with AD in three independent studies of different types. In a case-control study, males with AD diagnosis had higher degree of LOY mosaicism (adjusted odds ratio = 2.80, p = 0.0184, AD events = 606). Furthermore, in two prospective studies, men with LOY at blood sampling had greater risk for incident AD diagnosis during follow-up time (hazard ratio [HR] = 6.80, 95% confidence interval [95% CI] = 2.16-21.43, AD events = 140, p = 0.0011). Thus, LOY in blood is associated with risks of both AD and cancer, suggesting a role of LOY in blood cells on disease processes in other tissues, possibly via defective immunosurveillance. As a male-specific risk factor, LOY might explain why males on average live shorter lives than females.
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