Study uncovers key Alzheimer's gene in African American brains

Researchers have identified the gene ADAMTS2 as significantly more active in brain tissue from African Americans with Alzheimer's disease, marking a potential shared biological pathway across racial groups. This finding emerges from the largest study of its kind using brain samples from over 200 African American donors. The gene's prominence also appeared in a separate analysis of White individuals, suggesting broader implications for treatment.

Alzheimer's disease disproportionately affects African Americans, striking them at roughly twice the rate of White or European-ancestry individuals in the U.S. Factors like unequal healthcare access, educational disparities, and higher incidences of cardiovascular disease and diabetes contribute to this gap. However, genetic research has often overlooked African American populations due to small sample sizes in prior studies.

In a landmark effort, scientists at Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine examined gene expression in post-mortem prefrontal cortex tissue from 207 African American brain donors. Of these, 125 had pathologically confirmed Alzheimer's, while 82 served as controls. The samples were sourced from 14 NIH-funded Alzheimer's Research Centers nationwide.

The analysis revealed numerous genes differing between the groups, many previously unlinked to the disease. The standout was ADAMTS2, whose activity was 1.5 times higher in Alzheimer's-affected tissue compared to controls. Remarkably, this gene ranked highest in an independent study by the same team, which analyzed brain tissue from a larger cohort of White individuals—comparing those with Alzheimer's pathology and symptoms to resilient cases.

"To our knowledge, this is the first time in similarly designed AD genetics studies that the most significant finding was the same in both white and African Americans," said Lindsay A. Farrer, PhD, chief of biomedical genetics at the school and corresponding author.

Farrer highlighted the discovery's potential: "The fact that expression of ADAMTS2 is significantly and substantially higher in brain tissue from both Whites and Blacks with AD not only points to a shared biological process leading to AD, but also elevates the priority of further research involving this gene which could determine its suitability as a potential therapeutic target."

While many Alzheimer's risk variants vary by population, this overlap suggests common mechanisms. The study, published online in Alzheimer's & Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer's Association, was funded by multiple NIH grants but independent of funder influence.

This advance could refine understanding of Alzheimer's genetics in underrepresented groups, paving the way for targeted therapies.

관련 기사

Scientific illustration showing AI tool SIGNET mapping disrupted gene networks in Alzheimer's brain neurons.
AI에 의해 생성된 이미지

AI tool maps causal gene-control networks in Alzheimer’s brain cells

AI에 의해 보고됨 AI에 의해 생성된 이미지 사실 확인됨

Researchers at the University of California, Irvine report that a machine-learning system called SIGNET can infer cause-and-effect links between genes in human brain tissue, revealing extensive rewiring of gene regulation—especially in excitatory neurons—in Alzheimer’s disease.

Researchers at University College London have found that up to 93 percent of Alzheimer's cases may be linked to variants of the APOE gene, far more than previously estimated. The analysis, published in npj Dementia, also indicates that nearly half of all dementia cases could depend on this gene. The discovery underscores APOE as a key target for future treatments.

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New research reveals that blood from younger mice can protect against Alzheimer's-like brain damage, while older blood accelerates it. Scientists conducted experiments infusing mouse blood over 30 weeks to observe effects on memory and protein buildup. The findings highlight blood's role in brain health and potential new treatments.

Researchers at UNSW Sydney have identified around 150 functional DNA enhancers in human astrocytes that regulate genes associated with Alzheimer's disease. By testing nearly 1,000 potential switches using advanced genetic tools, the team revealed how non-coding DNA influences brain cell activity. The findings, published on December 18 in Nature Neuroscience, could aid in developing targeted therapies and improving AI predictions of gene control.

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Researchers have demonstrated that restoring levels of a key brain energy molecule can reverse advanced Alzheimer's disease in mouse models, repairing damage and restoring cognitive function. The study, published on December 22, challenges the long-held view that the condition is irreversible. Findings from human brain tissue support the approach's potential relevance to patients.

Researchers at Sweden’s Karolinska Institutet and Japan’s RIKEN Center for Brain Science report that two somatostatin receptors, SST1 and SST4, jointly regulate levels of neprilysin—an enzyme that breaks down amyloid-beta—in the hippocampus. In mouse models, activating the receptors raised neprilysin, reduced amyloid-beta buildup and improved memory-related behavior, the team said.

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A large study published in Neurology finds that impaired kidney function is linked to higher levels of Alzheimer’s biomarkers in the blood, without increasing overall dementia risk. However, among people who already have elevated biomarker levels, poor kidney health may hasten when dementia symptoms appear, underscoring the need to factor kidney function into interpretation of Alzheimer’s blood tests.

 

 

 

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