Abstract
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) may appear to be familial or sporadic, with recognised dominant and recessive inheritance in a proportion of cases. Sporadic ALS may be caused by rare homozygous recessive mutations. We studied patients and controls from the UK and a multinational pooled analysis of GWAS data on homozygosity in ALS to determine any potential recessive variant leading to the disease. Six-hundred and twenty ALS and 5169 controls were studied in the UK cohort. A total of 7646 homozygosity segments with length >2 Mb were identified, and 3568 rare segments remained after filtering ‘common’ segments. The mean total of the autosomal genome with homozygosity segments was longer in ALS than in controls (unfiltered segments, P=0.05). Two-thousand and seventeen ALS and 6918 controls were studied in the pooled analysis. There were more regions of homozygosity segments per case (P=1 × 10−5), a greater proportion of cases harboured homozygosity (P=2 × 10−5), a longer average length of segment (P=1 × 10−5), a longer total genome coverage (P=1 × 10−5), and a higher rate of these segments overlapped with RefSeq gene regions (P=1 × 10−5), in ALS patients than controls. Positive associations were found in three regions. The most significant was in the chromosome 21 SOD1 region, and also chromosome 1 2.9–4.8 Mb, and chromosome 5 in the 65 Mb region. There are more than twenty potential genes in these regions. These findings point to further possible rare recessive genetic causes of ALS, which are not identified as common variants in GWAS.
Introduction
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a neurodegenerative disease affecting upper and lower motor neurons. It is characterised by rapidly progressive weakness and ultimately death usually from respiratory failure. The majority of cases are idiopathic with about 5% having a familial history.1 Dominant mutations have been identified in SOD1,2 TDP43,3 FUS,4 VCP,5 and C9ORF72.6, 7 Recessive mutations are also known to cause ALS, including the SOD1 D90A mutation8, 9, 10 and OPTN.11 About 1.6% of the European genome is made up of long segments of homozygosity, representing common ancestral origin.12 Sporadic ALS may be caused by rare homozygous recessive mutations through inheriting the same defective haplotype. High throughput microarray designed for detecting common single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) can be used to tag variants and loci. The tag can be extended to haplotypes, including less common ones through combination of SNPs. By running haplotype or homozygosity mapping analysis on these SNPs array data, haplotypes and homozygous segments that are associated with ALS can be identified and used to uncover rare recessive mutations.
We studied patients and controls from the UK and a multinational pooled analysis of GWAS data on homozygosity in ALS to determine any potential regions that may carry recessive disease-associated variants leading to the disease.
Methods
Patients with ALS fulfilling the El Escorial criteria13 were recruited from neurology centres in UK. All samples had the SNP genotyped at the UCL Genomics Microarray Centre, using Illumina Human610-Quad BeadChip (Illumina, San Diego, CA, USA) and data assembled in Genome Studio (Illumina). Control data were drawn from the Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium (WTCCC) data set.14 The UK ALS sample was as previously published.15 The other four cohorts were data sets from Finland,16 Ireland,17 USA,18 and Italy.19 They were all genotyped using Illumina SNP arrays (Table 1).
Sample and SNPs quality control
Standard quality control procedures were applied to each data set before combining. In brief, samples were excluded in PLINK20 if they had call rates <95%, gender discordance, demonstrated cryptic relatedness (defined as pi_hat>12.5%, effectively removing all first or second degree relatives), or were outliers from the populations with European ancestry (defined as >3 SD values away from the combined CEU/TSI21 population mean in component 1 and 2, using PLINK Multi-dimensional scaling plot). SNPs were excluded if they had a minor allele frequency <0.01, Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium (P<10−6 in case and <10−4 in controls), non-random missing by haplotype (P<10−4), or evidence of non-random missing in cases vs controls (P<10−4). For pooled-cohort analysis, only SNPs that were genotyped, passed quality control and common to all five cohorts were merged.
Runs of homozygosity
Runs of homozygosity segments were called with PLINK v1.07. Default values in PLINK were used for the window scanning of the genome with two exceptions. The window was defined as 50 SNPs (which is the default value), with no heterozygous genotype allowed (default value=1) and only 1 missing genotype (default value=5). The more stringent criteria aimed at minimising false positives as genotyping error in Illumina is documented to be much <1%.22 Homozygosity segments were defined as homozygous segments >2 Mb, taking into account the final pooled five-population cohort had only 273 k SNPs. The use of a longer segment length was aimed at preferentially recruiting more phylogenetically recent segments. The assumption is that pathogenic mutations arise more recently. More recent mutations and their haplotypes are usually longer in length. Analysis was performed in the 22 autosomal chromosomes only. The commands used are given in the Supplementary Method.
Exclusion of common runs of homozygosity segments
Homozygosity segments are more commonly found in regions with lower recombination fraction (the recombination ‘cold spot’).23, 24 Hundreds of segments could be found. An attempt to eliminate these common runs was made because of our a priori assumption of rarity in pathogenic recessive homozygous segments. Common regions were defined as >1% of individuals (cases and controls together) having homozygosity segments of >2 Mb length passing though the region. Kurtosis test (a test for skewness of the data in the sample, R Statiscial Package)25 was then applied to pick up the segments with skewed length. Rarity was defined as regions with Kurtosis value >10 and segments with length >2 SD from the mean. These segments were retained for association analysis. (An example of pre and post exclusion or filtering is shown in Supplementary Figure 1.)
Burden analysis
Number of segments, proportion of sample with one or more homozygosity segments, total length spanned and average segment size were used for calculating the burden of homozygosity in cases vs controls, by adapting the PLINK rare CNV analysis. Means of these parameters were compared using PLINK rare CNV burden analysis (default parameter: 1-sided test; empirical P-values generated by permuting case/control status with 100 000 permutations; statistical significance level set as P<0.05).
Association analysis
Two types of mapping were used to locate regions in which homozygosity differed between cases and controls. The first was RefSeq gene-based. This gene list was drawn from the list of 19 058 RefSeq genes, based on UCSC browser (built NCBI136/hg18) downloaded from the PLINK website. Number of homozygosity segments overlapping with each RefSeq gene was counted in cases and controls. P-values were computed based on 100 000 case/control status permutations adapting from PLINK rare CNV analysis. Correction for genome-wide P-value was also generated by PLINK permutation analysis. A second method was based on consensus overlapping regions. The regions were defined in PLINK by lining up all the segments. Each consensus region represents a unique combination of overlapping segments. As in the gene-based method, the number of homozygosity segments overlapping with each region was counted in case and control and the P-value derived with permutation. To be more conservative, overall significance was taken as P<0.01 in the genome-wide analysis. Annotation was obtained online from NCBI gene.26
Results
UK cohort analysis
There was a total of 620 cases (396 males, 224 females), and 5169 controls (2608 males, 2561 females). The cohort consisted of 511 743 SNPs after quality control (Table 1). A total of 7646 homozygosity segments with length >2 Mb (817 in case, 6829 in control) was called with PLINK. Of these, 3568 rare segments remained after filtering out ’common‘ segments as defined above (388 in case, 3180 in control). There was no significant difference in the mean number of segments per individual (1.318 homozygosity segments per case vs 1.321 homozygosity segments per control, P=0.53). Mean total coverage of the autosomal genome by homozygosity segments in cases was longer than in controls, 5453 vs 5038 kb (P=0.05). A greater difference in genome coverage and greater statistical significance was found if the definition of homozygosity was restricted to longer segments. This definition effectively excluded more ‘common’ homozygosity segments and also retained homozygosity segments and haplotypes phylogenetically more recent in origin, which are usually longer (Supplementary Table 1). Comparison of mean length of homozygosity segments also reached statistical significance if the definition of homozygosity was restricted to longer segments. The same trend was observed whether the analysis was performed in all homozygosity segments or performed on rare homozygosity segments only.
There was no significant association in any RefSeq genes or any consensus regions in the studies within the UK cohort alone. There were nine genes with nominal P<0.01 but this did not reach significance with multiple gene correction in permutation analysis (Supplementary Table 1c).
Combined analysis of five cohorts
Burden of homozygosity
There was a total of 2017 cases and 6918 controls in the pooled five-cohort analysis. The population distribution is shown in Table 1. The final merged cohort consisted of 272 819 SNPs in common. There was a total of 4330 homozygosity segments >2 Mb in ALS cases and 9390 homozygosity segments in controls detected in this pooled five-population cohort. There were more segments per case (2.15 homozygosity segments vs 1.36, P=1 × 10−5), a greater proportion of cases harboured homozygosity (0.71 vs 0.66, P=2 × 10−5), longer average length of homozygosity segments (3524 vs 3029 kb, P=1 × 10−5), a longer total genome coverage (P=1 × 10−5), and a higher rate of these segments overlapped with RefSeq gene region (P=1 × 10−5) (Table 2). A similar result was also found when the common segments were filtered out (Supplementary Table 2). The Finnish population contributed more homozygosity segments per sample than the other cohorts. However, the overall significance was retained without the Finnish population. Despite the smaller sample size, the burden of homozygosity segment was also statistically significant in Irish and Italian samples. (Supplementary Table 3).
Gene-based association analysis
Three regions of homozygosity were found associated with ALS. (Table 3). A further list of RefSeq gene areas that showed association with P-value of <0.05 is shown in Supplementary Table 4. The most significant genome-wide association, corrected with 100 000 case–control status permutations, was centred on Chr 21 SOD1 region. This was followed by Chr 1 at position 2.9–4.8 Mb and Chr 5 around the 65 Mb region. The same three loci showed evidence of association with ALS even when common segments were retained in the analysis. No associations were found in TDP43, ANG, FUS, CHMP2B, VCP, and C9orf72 regions.
The Chr 21 association was contributed to mainly by the Finnish cohort, which included 40 familial ALS cases with homozygous D90A mutation. Our study showed 20 cases with homozygosity that spanned SOD1. Eleven of these were from the Finnish study. No association with Chr 21 was found if the Finnish cohort was excluded from the analysis.
The most statistically significant region in Chr 1 was found in 2.9–4.8 Mb (nominal P 1 × 10e−5 with 100 000 permutations, corrected for genome-wide, best P=0.0013) (Table 3A). Homozygosity segments at Chr 1 varied from 2 to 12.7 Mb. In the 5′ and 3′ end of this region, there were 10 homozyygous segments in ALS vs 1 in control (Figure 1). The ‘single’ control was contributed by two controls, one from Finnish and one from UK. Each of these two controls overlapped at one of the two ends, Finnish at 5′ and UK at 3′. Within the central core, there was a section that neither of the two controls overlapped, with nine homozygosity segments from ALS cases. A total of 11 ALS cases from different cohorts contributed to the homozygosity segments in this region, 4 Finnish, 4 Italian, 1 Irish, 1 UK, and 1 USA. No single haplotype spanned over this overlapping region.
A total of 14 genes are located in the Chr 1 2.9–4.8 Mb region showing statistically significant association (P<0.01). These included: ACTRT2, PRDM16, ARHGEF16, MEGF6, TPRG1L, WDR8, TP73, KIAA0495, CCDC27, LRRC47, KIAA0562, DFFB, C1orf174, AJAP1. The annotations and functions of the potential genes show diverse functions (Supplementary Table 5A).
On Chr 5, the positive associations were clustered around 65 Mb (Figure 2). From 64.8 to 66.5 Mb, nine genes in this region were shown to be significantly in association with ALS (nominal P 1 × 10e−5 with 100 000 permutation, corrected for genome-wide P<0.01) (Table 3B). Among the ALS cases with homozygosity, nine were from Finnish, three Irish, six Italian, two US and one UK. Annotations are shown in Supplementary Table 5B. As in the Chr 1 region, there were no common homozygosity segments around this region. Both analyses yielded similar findings, with or without filtering common segments.
Consensus region-based association analysis
The analysis showed the same three clusters as in the gene-based analysis. Chr 21 was still the most significant. This was followed by a small segment in Chr 5 65.4–65.7 Mb (Table 4), and then by Chr 1 region and other segments in the Chr 5 cluster (Supplementary Table 5). The Chr 5 65.4–65.7 Mb region is an intergenic area with no Refseq gene. Hence this area was omitted when only gene-based association was considered (Figure 2).
Discussion
Recessive mutations have been shown to cause ALS though these are not common.8 Known recessive genes include SOD1 (D90A), ALSIN, and OPTN. ALSIN has been associated with rare juvenile onset ALS cases but not adult forms.27 In ALSIN knockout mice, AMPA receptor trafficking is impaired and leads to neuronal degeneration.28 Genetic ablation of ALSIN in SOD1 (H46R) mice exacerbated motor dysfunction.29 Alsin also acts as a modifier in Nox2-dependent endosomal reactive oxygen species production in SOD1(G93A) glial cells.30
Recessive OPTN mutations leading to ALS are rarely reported outside Japan, however, optineurin protein was found in inclusions in ALS and other neurodegenerative diseases.31 Optineurin was also found colocalised with FUS in basophilic inclusions of FUS-linked ALS.32
Recessive mutations in ALS are rare. A study of 563 sporadic and 124 familial cases in Caucasians found no non-synonymous mutation.33 ALSIN was not known to cause adult forms of ALS.27 Nevertheless, recessive mutations may point to important pathological pathways. Overall, we found more homozygosity segments in ALS cases than controls (P=1 × 10−5), contributed to by Finnish, Irish, and Italian samples. This supports the hypothesis that some ALS cases are due to homozygous recessive loci. Homozygosity generated via identity by descent is known to occur even in outbred populations.12 Recessive mutants harboured in the haplotype, transmitted to the same individual via this mechanism, could lead to ‘sporadic’ ALS. Our five-population pooled-cohort analysis shows that not only the number of segments was increased in ALS cases, but the average genome coverage and the mean segment length were also longer in ALS cases. These data suggest a recessive component to the aetiology of sporadic ALS.
The excess homozygosity found on Chr 21, Chr 1, and Chr 5 implies that recessive pathogenic mutants may be located in this region. Detection of the familial SOD1 mutation contributed by the Finnish cohort indirectly acted as a positive control for our analysis, proving the ability of the method to find pathogenic mutants through significant clustering of homozygosity. Eleven Finnish cases in this study were found to contain homozygous segments >2 Mb at Chr 21 spanning the SOD1 region. Laaksovirta et al16 found that there were 40 cases of SOD1 D90A homozygous mutation. Hence, 29 of them were not detected in this study. These remaining 29 undetected cases did not enter into the statistical calculation of association significance. This demonstrates the power of using homozygosity to find a region even with a small number of positive detections. Equally, a small number of false-positive cases will increase the risk of a false-positive association. For this reason that we used strict criteria for preventing false-positive homozygosity call as discussed below.
The discrepancy in Finnish cases is probably due to more than one haplotype harbouring SOD1 D90A in the Finnish population. Homozygous SOD1 D90A mutations contributed by different haplotypes would not be read as segments of homozygosity in PLINK. This detection rate still suggests a single dominant haplotype of >2 Mb harbouring the SOD1 D90A mutation in the Finnish case cohort. It requires a haplotype frequency >0.5 to produce a homozygous haplotype in more than a quarter of the cohort (11/40). Al-Chalabi et al34 suggested that all the SOD1 D90A recessive mutations had a common founder.
Another explanation for the discrepancy of our homozygosity detection is that the homozygous segments of Laaksovirta et al16 were <2 Mb and thus not detected. Indeed, 22 segments of homozygosity were found spanning SOD1 if the calling criteria were decreased to 1 Mb. Parton et al35 suggested the disease modifying haplotype ranged from 97 to 275 kb, well below our 2 Mb segment requirement. We considered the approach of Casey et al,36 using homozygosity of 1 Mb length followed by haplotype analysis. This extracts data from homozygosity and narrows with haplotype comparison to find the target genes. However, our combined cohort has only 273 K SNPs, while Casey et al had >1 Mb. This increases the chance of false haplotype call secondary to being identical by state. Also, the cohort of Casey et al used family trios for case and control. Our cohort is more diversified. This increases the complexity of clustering and haplotype analysis.
There were 14 genes located in the homozygous region of Chr 1, with diverse functions. The genes act on muscle cell (PRDM16), cytoskeleton (ACTRT2), RNA function (KIAA0495), and apoptosis (TP73, LRRC47, DFFB). All of these are potential pathogenic pathways in ALS. Of particular interest is ARHGEF16 (15 exons). This has a role in protein–protein and protein–lipid interaction. The expression of ARHGEF16 was recently reported to be upregulated in CHMP2B mutant lower motor neuron cells when compared with controls.37 Another possibility is interaction with TDP43. TDP43 is 7.6 Mb downstream from the 3′ end of ARHGEF16 in the chromosome. It is outside the usual range of cis-control. Chromatin can form loops and put distant segments to adjacent regions for interaction, as for example with beta-globulin.38 This interaction of homozygous segments in Chr 1 and TDP-43 could be examined further by examining the control of TDP43 expression by the segment and vice versa.
There were nine genes located in the associated segment in Chr 5. The length of the homozygosity segment varied from 2.1 to 19 Mb. The best significance was not located in the area of RefSeq genes but in an intergenic region. The molecular genetic pathogenesis of ALS has been proposed to relate to disruption of RNA processing. It is possible that the intergenic region is related to non-coding RNA processes and thus not in the RefSeq gene regions. Based on the Wellcome Trust Rfam database, a ncRNA, small nucleolar RNA U13,39 was predicted to be in this region.
There are 23 genes in the two regions, and more if the confidence level of association is decreased. This may be examined further by exome sequencing, to determine if there is any common recessive mutation in the regions. Targeted resequencing of the two regions will be required to examine the intergenic regions for mutations other than RefSeq regions.
This type of homozygosity analysis has its own limitations. Given the SNPs in the SNP-array are usually common, there is a high chance that homozygosity of short range, for example, a few SNPs, is the result of being ‘identical by state’. There is a balance in retaining more true-positive result at the expense of lots of false-positive results. We took the approach of using more stringent criteria. For example, in the window scanning, we used much harsher criteria than the suggested default value. This approach helps exclude many false positives, but at the expense of excluding true positives. The multiple analyses for the whole pose a similar problem. To prevent an excess of false-positive candidate regions, a high cutoff for the selection will exclude the true rare pathogenic variants. For example, in the pooled-cohorts analysis, a true pathogenic segment that is found three times in cases but not in controls will fail in the statistical test and will be discarded. These analyses usually have a minimum length of 1–2 Mb, generating a large region that rarely gives a single gene for follow-up. Our Chr 21 region (data not shown) showed more than one gene other than SOD1. As we were aware that D90A variants were present in the cohorts and D90A is pathogenic, we had no difficulty in identifying the pathogenic gene. This also serves as a positive control in our study. For the other two regions, there is no good evidence to pick one gene over another. Hence, we stress the region as a whole and further examination is required for further dissection, to be followed up by sequencing.
In summary, we found an excess of homozygous segments in a pooled-cohort analysis of GWAS data in sporadic ALS cases. Besides SOD1, the best clusters are within Chr 1 around position 3–5 Mb and Chr 5 around position 65–66.5 Mb.
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Acknowledgements
This work was supported in part by the Intramural Research Programs of the NIH, the National Institute on Aging (Z01-AG000949-02), and the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke. Extramural NIH grants R01AG031278 and R01AG038791 supported some family assessments. The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Community’s Health Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013) under grant agreement no. 259867. We thank the Motor Neurone Disease Association of Great Britain for several grants relating to this work (RWO, AAC, PJS, HM), the ALS Association, The Angel Fund, the ALS Therapy Alliance, and the Wellcome Trust (PJS) for support. This work was also funded by the Reta Lila Weston Foundation, and by an MRC returning scientist (JH) and fellowship (SPB) award, by Microsoft Research Foundation, the ALS Association, Helsinki University Central Hospital, the Finnish Academy, Ministero della Salute, Progetti Finalizzati 2007, Fondazione Vialli e Mauro for ALS, and Federazione Italiana Giuoco Calcio. The authors thank the NIHR specialist Biomedical Research Centre for Mental Health at the South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust (SLaM) and the Institute of Psychiatry, King’s College London, and the National Institute for Health Research-funded University College London / University College London Hospitals Biomedical Research Centre.
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Mok, K., Laaksovirta, H., Tienari, P. et al. Homozygosity analysis in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Eur J Hum Genet 21, 1429–1435 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1038/ejhg.2013.59
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/ejhg.2013.59
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