Genetic effects and gene-by-education interactions on episodic memory performance and decline in an aging population

Publication date: Available online 10 November 2018Source: Social Science & MedicineAuthor(s): Jennifer A. Smith, Minjung Kho, Wei Zhao, Miao Yu, Colter Mitchell, Jessica D. FaulAbstractBoth social and genetic factors contribute to cognitive impairment and decline, yet genetic factors identified through genome-wide association studies (GWAS) explain only a small portion of trait variability. This “missing heritability” may be due to rare, potentially functional, genetic variants not assessed by GWAS, as well as gene-by-social factor interactions not explicitly modeled. Gene-by-social factor interactions may also operate differently across race/ethnic groups. We selected 39 genes that had significant, replicated associations with cognition, dementia, and related traits in published GWAS. Using gene-based analysis (SKAT/iSKAT), we tested whether common and/or rare variants were associated with episodic memory performance and decline either alone or through interaction with education in>10,000 European ancestry (EA) and>2200 African ancestry (AA) respondents from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS). Nine genes in EA and five genes in AA were associated with memory performance or decline (p < 0.05), and these effects did not attenuate after adjusting for education. Interaction between education and CLPTM1 on memory performance was significant in AA (p = 0.003; FDR-adjusted p = 0.038) and nominally significant in EA (p = 0.026). In both ethnicities, low m...
Source: Social Science and Medicine - Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Source Type: research