Characterization of the genetic and clinical landscapes of DCTN1 gene in neurodegenerative diseases: a series of large case-control study.
Xiaorong Hou, Xuxiong Tang, Yuwen Zhao, Ziqin Liu, Jiajian Zhang, Ziwei Gong, Zhineng Kang, Ziwen Li, Han Chen, Junling Wang, Beisha Tang, Xiaoxia Zhou, Lifang Lei
Abstract
Open AccessImpairment of axonal transport has been emphasized as a common feature in a series of neurodegenerative diseases (NDs). Variations in DCTN1 have been reported in NDs such as Parkinson's disease (PD), Perry syndrome (PS) and Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). The overall objective of this study was to investigate the contribution of DCTN1 variants in different NDs and to explore the correlation between DCTN1 variants and disease phenotypes. We identified a previously published mutation p.G71E in three unrelated PS families. In the PD cohort, 30 putative deleterious variants (PDVs) were identified in DCTN1. Gene-based burden analysis showed a nominal association between DCTN1 rare PDVs and PD (uncorrected p = 0.042); however, this association did not remain statistically significant after multiple testing correction (FDR-corrected p = 0.084). In the ALS cohort, 10 PDVs were all rare damaging missense variants, and the PDVs were not enriched in ALS patients. Our findings first provide the independent evidence that PDVs in DCTN1 may be a risk factor for PD, but do not support the genetic involvement of DCTN1 in ALS of Asian ancestry.