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Browsing by Author "Mead, Simon"

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    Age at onset in genetic prion disease and the design of preventive clinical trials
    (2019)
    Minikel, Eric Vallabh
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    Vallabh, Sonia M.
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    Orseth, Margaret C.
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    Brandel, Jean-Philippe
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    Haïk, Stéphane
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    Laplanche, Jean-Louis
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    Zerr, Inga
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    Parchi, Piero
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    Capellari, Sabina
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    Safar, Jiri
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    Kenny, Janna
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    Fong, Jamie C.
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    Takada, Leonel T.
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    Ponto, Claudia  
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    Hermann, Peter  
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    Knipper, Tobias  
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    Stehmann, Christiane
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    Kitamoto, Tetsuyuki
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    Ae, Ryusuke
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    Hamaguchi, Tsuyoshi
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    Sanjo, Nobuo
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    Tsukamoto, Tadashi
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    Mizusawa, Hidehiro
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    Collins, Steven J.
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    Chiesa, Roberto
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    Roiter, Ignazio
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    de Pedro-Cuesta, Jesús
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    Calero, Miguel
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    Geschwind, Michael D.
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    Yamada, Masahito
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    Nakamura, Yosikazu
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    Mead, Simon
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    Ascertainment Bias Causes False Signal of Anticipation in Genetic Prion Disease
    (Cell Press, 2014)
    Minikel, Eric Vallabh
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    Zerr, Inga
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    Collins, Steven J.
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    Ponto, Claudia  
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    Boyd, Alison
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    Klug, Genevieve M. J. A.
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    Karch, Andre  
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    Kenny, Joanna
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    Collinge, John
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    Takada, Leonel T.
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    Forner, Sven
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    Fong, Jamie C.
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    Mead, Simon
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    Geschwind, Michael D.
    Anticipation is the phenomenon whereby age of onset in genetic disease decreases in successive generations. Three independent reports have claimed anticipation in Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) caused by the c.598G>A mutation in PRNP encoding a p.Glu200Lys (E200K) substitution in the prion protein. If confirmed, this finding would carry clear implications for genetic counseling. We analyzed pedigrees with this mutation from four prion centers worldwide (n = 217 individuals with the mutation) to analyze age of onset and death in affected and censored individuals. We show through simulation that selective ascertainment of individuals whose onset falls within the historical window since the mutation's 1989 discovery is sufficient to create robust false signals both of anticipation and of heritability of age of onset. In our data set, the number of years of anticipation observed depends upon how strictly the data are limited by the ascertainment window. Among individuals whose disease was directly observed at a study center, a 28-year difference between parent and child age of onset is observed (p = 0.002), but including individuals ascertained retrospectively through family history reduces this figure to 7 years (p = 0.005). Applying survival analysis to the most thoroughly ascertained subset of data eliminates the signal of anticipation. Moreover, even non-CJD deaths exhibit 16 years anticipation (p = 0.002), indicating that ascertainment bias can entirely explain observed anticipation. We suggest that reports of anticipation in genetic prion disease are driven entirely by ascertainment bias. Guidelines for future studies claiming statistical evidence for anticipation are suggested.
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    Biomarkers and diagnostic guidelines for sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
    (2021)
    Hermann, Peter
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    Appleby, Brian
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    Brandel, Jean-Philippe
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    Caughey, Byron
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    Collins, Steven
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    Geschwind, Michael D.
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    Green, Alison
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    Haïk, Stephane
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    Kovacs, Gabor G.
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    Ladogana, Anna
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    Llorens, Franc
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    Mead, Simon
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    Nishida, Noriyuki
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    Pal, Suvankar
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    Parchi, Piero
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    Pocchiari, Maurizio
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    Satoh, Katsuya
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    Zanusso, Gianluigi
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    Zerr, Inga
    Sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease is a fatal neurodegenerative disease caused by misfolded prion proteins (PrPSc). Effective therapeutics are currently not available and accurate diagnosis can be challenging. Clinical diagnostic criteria use a combination of characteristic neuropsychiatric symptoms, CSF proteins 14-3-3, MRI, and EEG. Supportive biomarkers, such as high CSF total tau, could aid the diagnostic process. However, discordant studies have led to controversies about the clinical value of some established surrogate biomarkers. Development and clinical application of disease-specific protein aggregation and amplification assays, such as real-time quaking induced conversion (RT-QuIC), have constituted major breakthroughs for the confident pre-mortem diagnosis of sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. Updated criteria for the diagnosis of sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, including application of RT-QuIC, should improve early clinical confirmation, surveillance, assessment of PrPSc seeding activity in different tissues, and trial monitoring. Moreover, emerging blood-based, prognostic, and potentially pre-symptomatic biomarker candidates are under investigation.
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    Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease and other prion diseases
    (2024)
    Zerr, Inga
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    Ladogana, Anna
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    Mead, Simon
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    Hermann, Peter
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    Forloni, Gianluigi
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    Appleby, Brian S.
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    Genetic Evidence Implicates the Immune System and Cholesterol Metabolism in the Aetiology of Alzheimer's Disease
    (2010-11-15)
    Jones, Lesley
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    Holmans, Peter A.
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    Hamshere, Marian L.
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    Harold, Denise
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    Moskvina, Valentina
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    Ivanov, Dobril
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    Pocklington, Andrew
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    Abraham, Richard
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    Hollingworth, Paul
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    Sims, Rebecca
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    Gerrish, Amy
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    Pahwa, Jaspreet Singh
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    Jones, Nicola
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    Stretton, Alexandra
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    Morgan, Angharad R.
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    Lovestone, Simon
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    Powell, John
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    Proitsi, Petroula
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    Lupton, Michelle K.
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    Brayne, Carol
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    Rubinsztein, David C.
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    Gill, Michael
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    Lawlor, Brian
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    Lynch, Aoibhinn
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    Morgan, Kevin
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    Brown, Kristelle S.
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    Passmore, Peter A.
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    Craig, David
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    McGuinness, Bernadette
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    Todd, Stephen
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    Holmes, Clive
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    Mann, David
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    Smith, A. David
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    Love, Seth
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    Kehoe, Patrick G.
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    Mead, Simon
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    Fox, Nick
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    Rossor, Martin
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    Collinge, John
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    Maier, Wolfgang
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    Jessen, Frank
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    Schürmann, Britta
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    van den Bussche, Hendrik
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    Heuser, Isabella
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    Peters, Oliver
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    Kornhuber, Johannes  
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    Wiltfang, Jens  
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    Dichgans, Martin
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    Frölich, Lutz
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    Hampel, Harald
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    Hüll, Michael
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    Rujescu, Dan
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    Goate, Alison M.
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    Kauwe, John S. K.
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    Cruchaga, Carlos
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    Nowotny, Petra
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    Morris, John C.
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    Mayo, Kevin
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    Livingston, Gill
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    Bass, Nicholas J.
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    Gurling, Hugh
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    McQuillin, Andrew
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    Gwilliam, Rhian
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    Deloukas, Panos
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    Al-Chalabi, Ammar
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    Shaw, Christopher E.
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    Singleton, Andrew B.
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    Guerreiro, Rita
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    Mühleisen, Thomas W.
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    Nöthen, Markus M.
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    Moebus, Susanne
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    Jöckel, Karl-Heinz
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    Klopp, Norman
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    Wichmann, H.-Erich
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    Rüther, Eckhard
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    Carrasquillo, Minerva M.
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    Pankratz, V. Shane
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    Younkin, Steven G.
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    Hardy, John
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    O’Donovan, Michael C.
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    Owen, Michael J.
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    Williams, Julie
    Background: Late Onset Alzheimer’s disease (LOAD) is the leading cause of dementia. Recent large genome-wide association studies (GWAS) identified the first strongly supported LOAD susceptibility genes since the discovery of the involvement of APOE in the early 1990s. We have now exploited these GWAS datasets to uncover key LOAD pathophysiological processes. Methodology: We applied a recently developed tool for mining GWAS data for biologically meaningful information to a LOAD GWAS dataset. The principal findings were then tested in an independent GWAS dataset. Principal Findings: We found a significant overrepresentation of association signals in pathways related to cholesterol metabolism and the immune response in both of the two largest genome-wide association studies for LOAD. Significance: Processes related to cholesterol metabolism and the innate immune response have previously been implicated by pathological and epidemiological studies of Alzheimer’s disease, but it has been unclear whether those findings reflected primary aetiological events or consequences of the disease process. Our independent evidence from two large studies now demonstrates that these processes are aetiologically relevant, and suggests that they may be suitable targets for novel and existing therapeutic approaches.
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    Genome-wide association study in multiple human prion diseases suggests genetic risk factors additional to PRNP
    (Oxford Univ Press, 2012)
    Mead, Simon
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    Uphill, James
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    Beck, John
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    Poulter, Mark
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    Campbell, Tracy
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    Lowe, Jessica
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    Adamson, Gary
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    Hummerich, Holger
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    Klopp, Norman
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    Rueckert, Ina-Maria
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    Wichmann, H-Erich
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    Azazi, Dhoyazan
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    Plagnol, Vincent
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    Pako, Wandagi H.
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    Whitfield, Jerome
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    Alpers, Michael P.
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    Whittaker, John
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    Balding, David J.
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    Zerr, Inga
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    Kretzschmar, Hans A.  
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    Collinge, John
    Prion diseases are fatal neurodegenerative diseases of humans and animals caused by the misfolding and aggregation of prion protein (PrP). Mammalian prion diseases are under strong genetic control but few risk factors are known aside from the PrP gene locus (PRNP). No genome-wide association study (GWAS) has been done aside from a small sample of variant CreutzfeldtJakob disease (CJD). We conducted GWAS of sporadic CJD (sCJD), variant CJD (vCJD), iatrogenic CJD, inherited prion disease, kuru and resistance to kuru despite attendance at mortuary feasts. After quality control, we analysed 2000 samples and 6015 control individuals (provided by the Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium and KORA-gen) for 491032-511862 SNPs in the European study. Association studies were done in each geographical and aetiological group followed by several combined analyses. The PRNP locus was highly associated with risk in all geographical and aetiological groups. This association was driven by the known coding variation at rs1799990 (PRNP codon 129). No non-PRNP loci achieved genome-wide significance in the meta-analysis of all human prion disease. SNPs at the ZBTB38RASA2 locus were associated with CJD in the UK (rs295301, P 3.13 10(8); OR, 0.70) but these SNPs showed no replication evidence of association in German sCJD or in Papua New Guinea-based tests. A SNP in the CHN2 gene was associated with vCJD [P 1.5 10(7); odds ratio (OR), 2.36], but not in UK sCJD (P 0.049; OR, 1.24), in German sCJD or in PNG groups. In the overall meta-analysis of CJD, 14 SNPs were associated (P 10(5); two at PRNP, three at ZBTB38RASA2, nine at nine other independent non-PRNP loci), more than would be expected by chance. None of the loci recently identified as genome-wide significant in studies of other neurodegenerative diseases showed any clear evidence of association in prion diseases. Concerning common genetic variation, it is likely that the PRNP locus contains the only strong risk factors that act universally across human prion diseases. Our data are most consistent with several other risk loci of modest overall effects which will require further genetic association studies to provide definitive evidence.
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    Identification of novel risk loci and causal insights for sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease: a genome-wide association study
    (2020)
    Jones, Emma
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    Hummerich, Holger
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    Viré, Emmanuelle
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    Uphill, James
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    Dimitriadis, Athanasios
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    Speedy, Helen
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    Campbell, Tracy
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    Norsworthy, Penny
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    Quinn, Liam
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    Whitfield, Jerome
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    Mead, Simon
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    Inherited mtDNA variations are not strong risk factors in human prion disease
    (Elsevier Science Inc, 2015)
    Hudson, Gavin
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    Uphill, James
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    Hummerich, Holger
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    Blevins, Janice
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    Gambetti, Pierluigi
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    Zerr, Inga
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    Collinge, John
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    Mead, Simon
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    Chinnery, Patrick F.
    Aside from variation in the prion protein gene, genetic risk factors for sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease remain elusive. Given emerging evidence implicating mitochondrial dysfunction in the pathogenesis of the disorders, we studied the role of inherited mitochondrial DNA variation in a 2255 sporadic prion disease cases and 3768 controls. Our analysis indicates that inherited mitochondrial DNA variation does not have a major role in the risk of developing the disorder. (C) 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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    R47H TREM2 variant increases risk of typical early-onset Alzheimer's disease but not of prion or frontotemporal dementia
    (Elsevier Science Inc, 2014)
    Slattery, Catherine F.
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    Beck, Jonathan A.
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    Harper, Lorna
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    Adamson, Gary
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    Abdi, Zeinab
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    Uphill, James
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    Campbell, Tracy
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    Druyeh, Ron
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    Mahoney, Colin J.
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    Rohrer, Jonathan D.
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    Kenny, Janna
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    Lowe, Jessica
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    Leung, Kelvin K.
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    Barnes, Josephine
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    Clegg, Shona L.
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    Blair, Melanie
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    Nicholas, Jennifer M.
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    Guerreiro, Rita J.
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    Rowe, James B.
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    Ponto, Claudia  
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    Zerr, Inga
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    Kretzschmar, Hans A.  
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    Gambetti, Pierluigi
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    Crutch, Sebastian J.
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    Warren, Jason D.
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    Rossor, Martin N.
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    Fox, Nick C.
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    Collinge, John
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    Schott, Jonathan M.
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    Mead, Simon
    Background: Rare TREM2 variants are significant risk factors for Alzheimer's disease (AD). Methods: We used next generation sequencing of the whole gene (n = 700), exon 2 Sanger sequencing (n = 2634), p.R47H genotyping (n = 3518), and genome wide association study imputation (n = 13,048) to determine whether TREM2 variants are risk factors or phenotypic modifiers in patients with AD (n = 1002), frontotemporal dementia (n = 358), sporadic (n = 2500), and variant (n = 115) Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD). Results: We confirm only p.R47H as a risk factor for AD (odds ratio or OR = 2.19; 95% confidence interval or CI = 1.04-4.51; P =.03). p.R47H does not significantly alter risk for frontotemporal dementia (OR = 0.81), variant or sporadic CJD (OR = 1.06 95%CI = 0.66-1.69) in our cohorts. Individuals with p.R47H associated AD (n = 12) had significantly earlier symptom onset than individuals with no TREM2 variants (n = 551) (55.2 years vs. 61.7 years, P = .02). We note that heterozygous p.R47H AD is memory led and otherwise indistinguishable from "typical" sporadic AD. Conclusion: We find p.R47H is a risk factor for AD, but not frontotemporal dementia or prion disease. (C) 2014 The Alzheimer's Association. All rights reserved.
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    Rare structural genetic variation in human prion diseases
    (Elsevier Science Inc, 2015)
    Lukic, Ana
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    Uphill, James
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    Brown, Craig A.
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    Beck, John
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    Poulter, Mark
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    Campbell, Tracy
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    Adamson, Gary
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    Hummerich, Holger
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    Whitfield, Jerome
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    Ponto, Claudia  
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    Zerr, Inga
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    Lloyd, Sarah E.
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    Collinge, John
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    Mead, Simon
    Prion diseases are a diverse group of neurodegenerative conditions, caused by the templated misfolding of prion protein. Aside from the strong genetic risk conferred by multiple variants of the prion protein gene (PRNP), several other variants have been suggested to confer risk in the most common type, sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD) or in the acquired prion diseases. Large and rare copy number variants (CNVs) are known to confer risk in several related disorders including Alzheimer's disease (at APP), schizophrenia, epilepsy, mental retardation, and autism. Here, we report the first genome-wide analysis for CNV-associated risk using data derived from a recent international collaborative association study in sCJD (n = 1147 after quality control) and publicly available controls (n = 5427). We also investigated UK patients with variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (n = 114) and elderly women from the Eastern Highlands of Papua New Guinea who proved highly resistant to the epidemic prion disease kuru, who were compared with healthy young Fore population controls (n = 395). There were no statistically significant alterations in the burden of CNVs >100, >500, or >1000 kb, duplications, or deletions in any disease group or geographic region. After correction for multiple testing, no statistically significant associations were found. A UK blood service control sample showed a duplication CNV that overlapped PRNP, but these were not found in prion disease. Heterozygous deletions of a 30 region of the PARK2 gene were found in 3 sCJD patients and no controls (p = 0.001, uncorrected). A cell-based prion infection assay did not provide supportive evidence for a role for PARK2 in prion disease susceptibility. These data are consistent with a modest impact of CNVs on risk of late-onset neurologic conditions and suggest that, unlike APP, PRNP duplication is not a causal high-risk mutation. (C) 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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    Variants of PLCXD3 are not associated with variant or sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in a large international study
    (Biomed Central Ltd, 2016)
    Balendra, Rubika
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    Uphill, James
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    Collinson, Claire
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    Druyeh, Ronald
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    Adamson, Gary
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    Hummerich, Holger
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    Zerr, Inga
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    Gambetti, Pierluigi
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    Collinge, John
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    Mead, Simon
    Background: Human prion diseases are relentlessly progressive neurodegenerative disorders which include sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD) and variant CJD (vCJD). Aside from variants of the prion protein gene (PRNP) replicated association at genome-wide levels of significance has proven elusive. A recent association study identified variants in or near to the PLCXD3 gene locus as strong disease risk factors in multiple human prion diseases. This study claimed the first non-PRNP locus to be highly significantly associated with prion disease in genomic studies. Methods: A sub-study of a genome-wide association study with imputation aiming to replicate the finding at PLCXD3 including 129 vCJD and 2500 sCJD samples. Whole exome sequencing to identify rare coding variants of PLCXD3. Results: Imputation of relevant polymorphisms was accurate based on wet genotyping of a sample. We found no supportive evidence that PLCXD3 variants are associated with disease. Conclusion: The marked discordance in vCJD genotype frequencies between studies, despite extensive overlap in vCJD cases, and the finding of Hardy-Weinberg disequilibrium in the original study, suggests possible reasons for the discrepancies between studies.

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