4.5 Article

Sex-Specific Association of the X Chromosome With Cognitive Change and Tau Pathology in Aging and Alzheimer Disease

Journal

JAMA NEUROLOGY
Volume 78, Issue 10, Pages 1249-1254

Publisher

AMER MEDICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1001/jamaneurol.2021.2806

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [NS092918, AG068325, P30AG10161, R01AG15819, R01AG17917, U01AG61356, U01AG46152, R01AG36836, R01AG060393, R01 AG062588]
  2. Coulter-Weeks Foundation
  3. Simons Foundation
  4. Bakar Family Foundation
  5. American Federation for Aging Research

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This study found that X chromosome gene expression is associated with cognitive change and tau pathology in aging and AD in a sex-specific manner, with cognitive change related to X chromosome gene expression in women and tau pathology related to X chromosome gene expression in men.
IMPORTANCE The X chromosome represents 5% of the human genome in women and men, and its influence on cognitive aging and Alzheimer disease (AD) is largely unknown. OBJECTIVE To determine whether the X chromosome is associated with sex-specific cognitive change and tau pathology in aging and AD. DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS This study examined differential gene expression profiling of the X chromosome from an RNA sequencing data set of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex obtained from autopsied, elderly individuals enrolled in the Religious Orders Study and Rush Memory and Aging Project joint cohorts. Samples were collected from the cohort study with enrollment from 1994 to 2017. Data were last analyzed in May 2021. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES The main analysis examined whether X chromosome gene expression measured by RNA sequencing of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex was associated with cognitive change during aging and AD, independent of AD pathology and at the transcriptome-wide level in women and men. Whether X chromosome gene expression was associated with neurofibrillary tangle burden, a measure of tau pathology that influences cognition, in women and men was also explored. RESULTS Samples for RNA sequencing of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex were obtained from 508 individuals (mean [SD] age at death, 88.4 [6.6] years; 315 [62.0%] were female; 197 [38.8%] had clinical diagnosis of AD at death; 293 [58.2%] had pathological diagnosis of AD at death) enrolled in the Religious Orders Study and Rush Memory and Aging Project joint cohorts and were followed up annually for a mean (SD) of 6.3 (3.9) years. X chromosome gene expression (29 genes), adjusted for age at death, education, and AD pathology, was significantly associated with cognitive change at the genome-wide level in women but not men. In the majority of identified X genes (19 genes), increased expression was associated with slower cognitive decline in women. In contrast with cognition, X chromosome gene expression (3 genes), adjusted for age at death and education, was associated with neuropathological tau burden at the genome-wide level in men but not women. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE In this study, the X chromosome was associated with cognitive trajectories and neuropathological tau burden in aging and AD in a sex-specific manner. This is important because specific X chromosome factors could contribute risk or resilience to biological pathways of aging and AD in women, men, or both. This cohort study determines whether the X chromosome is associated with sex-specific cognitive change and tau pathology in aging and Alzheimer disease.

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