Mutations

SORL1 W1216Ter

Other Names: W1216X

Overview

Clinical Phenotype: Alzheimer's Disease
Position: (GRCh38/hg38):Chr11:121583524 G>A
Position: (GRCh37/hg19):Chr11:121454233 G>A
dbSNP ID: NA
Coding/Non-Coding: Coding
DNA Change: Substitution
Expected Protein Consequence: Nonsense
Codon Change: TGG to TAG
Reference Isoform: SORL1 Isoform 1 (2214 aa)
Genomic Region: Exon 26

Findings

This protein-truncating variant was identified in a dataset from the Centre National de Référence - Malades Alzheimer Jeunes (CNR-MAJ), the French national reference center for young Alzheimer patients. The proband was 52 years old at symptom onset, with an APOE genotype of E3/E3 (Nicolas et al., 2016; Nicolas et al., 2018). Aside from an affected sibling of the proband (age of onset 68), from whom genotype information was unavailable, no additional AD cases were reported in a multi-generational pedigree (Schramm et al., 2022). Genotype information was available from two unaffected siblings of the proband: one (cognitively intact at age 66, APOE E3/E3) carries the W1216Ter variant and the other (cognitively intact at age 72, APOE3/E3) does not.

No additional carriers were found among 852 early onset cases, 927 late-onset cases, and 1,273 controls from the Alzheimer Disease Exome Sequencing France (ADESFR) project (Bellenguez et al., 2017; Campion et al., 2019).

This variant had been selected for genotyping in a North American sample of 217 sporadic early onset AD cases and 169 controls, based on its occurrence in the Exome Variant Server database as a nonsynonymous variant with a minor allele frequency <5 percent. The variant was not found in this cohort. Nor was it found by whole-exome or genome sequencing of 866 familial late-onset AD cases and 324 controls in the same study (Fernández et al., 2016).

In a study that included 15,808 Alzheimer’s cases and 16,097 control subjects from multiple European and American cohorts, including CNR-MAJ, this allele was observed once among the AD cases (Holstege et al., 2022).

Last Updated: 18 Jul 2024

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References

Paper Citations

  1. . SORL1 rare variants: a major risk factor for familial early-onset Alzheimer's disease. Mol Psychiatry. 2016 Jun;21(6):831-6. Epub 2015 Aug 25 PubMed.
  2. . Somatic variants in autosomal dominant genes are a rare cause of sporadic Alzheimer's disease. Alzheimers Dement. 2018 Dec;14(12):1632-1639. Epub 2018 Aug 13 PubMed.
  3. . Penetrance estimation of Alzheimer disease in SORL1 loss-of-function variant carriers using a family-based strategy and stratification by APOE genotypes. Genome Med. 2022 Jun 28;14(1):69. PubMed. Correction.
  4. . Contribution to Alzheimer's disease risk of rare variants in TREM2, SORL1, and ABCA7 in 1779 cases and 1273 controls. Neurobiol Aging. 2017 Nov;59:220.e1-220.e9. Epub 2017 Jul 14 PubMed.
  5. . SORL1 genetic variants and Alzheimer disease risk: a literature review and meta-analysis of sequencing data. Acta Neuropathol. 2019 Aug;138(2):173-186. Epub 2019 Mar 25 PubMed.
  6. . SORL1 variants across Alzheimer's disease European American cohorts. Eur J Hum Genet. 2016 Dec;24(12):1828-1830. Epub 2016 Sep 21 PubMed.
  7. . Exome sequencing identifies rare damaging variants in ATP8B4 and ABCA1 as risk factors for Alzheimer's disease. Nat Genet. 2022 Dec;54(12):1786-1794. Epub 2022 Nov 21 PubMed.

Further Reading

No Available Further Reading

Protein Diagram

Primary Papers

  1. . SORL1 rare variants: a major risk factor for familial early-onset Alzheimer's disease. Mol Psychiatry. 2016 Jun;21(6):831-6. Epub 2015 Aug 25 PubMed.

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