Genetic and host factors for dementia in Down's syndrome*

NICOLE SCHUPF, PhD

Laboratory of Epidemiology, New York State Institute for Basic Research in Developmental Disabilities, Staten Island

Gertrude H. Sergievsky

Center, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, USA

Correspondence: Nicole Schupf, PhD, New York State Institute for Basic Research, 1050 Forest Hill Road, Staten Island, NY 10314. Tel: 001 718 494 5301; Fax: 001 718 494 5395; e-mail: ns24{at}columbia.edu

Declaration of interest Grants IIRG-90-067 and RG3-96-077 from the Alzheimer's Association, Federal grants AG14673, HD35897, P50AG08702 and funds from New York State through its Office of Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities.

* Presented in part as the Blake Marsh Lecture at the Annual Meeting of the Royal College of Psychiatrists, 6 July 2000, Edinburgh. Back


   ABSTRACT
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 AMYLOID CASCADE HYPOTHESIS
 ATYPICAL KARYOTYPES
 GENETIC SUSCEPTIBILITY FACTORS
 GENDER AND OESTROGEN DEFICIENCY
 INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN...
 DISCUSSION
 Clinical Implications and...
 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 REFERENCES
 
Background The high risk for dementia in adults with Down's syndrome has been attributed to triplication and overexpression of the gene for amyloid precursor protein (APP). But the wide variation in age at onset must be due to other risk factors.

Aims To identify factors which influence age at onset of dementia in Down's syndrome.

Method Studies of factors which influence formation of beta-amyloid (Aß) were reviewed, including atypical karyotypes, susceptibility genotypes, gender and oestrogen deficiency, and individual differences in Aß peptide levels.

Results The apolipoprotein E {epsilon}4 allele, oestrogen deficiency and high levels of Aß1-42 peptide are associated with earlier onset of dementia, while atypical karyotypes and the apolipoprotein E {epsilon}2 allele are associated with reduced mortality and reduced risk of dementia.

Conclusions Factors which influence Aß levels, rather than overexpression of APP, may account for the differences in age at onset of dementia in Down's syndrome.


   INTRODUCTION
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 AMYLOID CASCADE HYPOTHESIS
 ATYPICAL KARYOTYPES
 GENETIC SUSCEPTIBILITY FACTORS
 GENDER AND OESTROGEN DEFICIENCY
 INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN...
 DISCUSSION
 Clinical Implications and...
 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 REFERENCES
 
Alzheimer's disease is associated with characteristic neuropathology that includes the deposition of extracellular beta-amyloid (Aß) in neuritic plaques and intracellular accumulation of neurofibrillary tangles. Adults with Down's syndrome have high levels of Aß deposition by age 40 years and early onset of dementia. However, the average age at onset of clinical dementia is 55 years, and varies widely. The neuropathological manifestations of Alzheimer's disease in Down's syndrome have been attributed to triplication and over-expression of the gene for beta-amyloid precursor protein (APP), located on chromosome 21, but the factors influencing age at onset of dementia are unresolved. Factors which influence formation and deposition of Aß are reviewed, including atypical karyotypes, susceptibility genotypes, gender and oestrogen deficiency, and individual differences in Aß peptide levels. Factors which modify the rate and degree of Aß deposition, rather than over-expression of APP, may be important determinants of risk for dementia in Down's syndrome.


   AMYLOID CASCADE HYPOTHESIS
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 AMYLOID CASCADE HYPOTHESIS
 ATYPICAL KARYOTYPES
 GENETIC SUSCEPTIBILITY FACTORS
 GENDER AND OESTROGEN DEFICIENCY
 INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN...
 DISCUSSION
 Clinical Implications and...
 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 REFERENCES
 
Although there has been controversy about the relative importance of plaques versus tangles in the development of Alzheimer's disease, there is increasing evidence that altered metabolism of Aß peptides and amyloid deposition in neuritic plaques causes Alzheimer's disease by triggering a complex pathological cascade that produces dementia. The Aß peptides Aß1-40 and Aß1-42, the two major species of Aß, are generated from APP by sequential proteolytic cleavage by ß- and {gamma}- secretases. These enzymes are not the only ones involved in the breakdown of APP: {alpha}-secretase cleaves the full-length APP, producing soluble sAPP and, subsequently, p3. Because processing by {alpha}-secretase precludes production of full-length Aß peptides, it is anti-amyloidogenic (Younkin, 1998).

Several lines of evidence suggest that deposition of Aß-42 is an important initial step in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease. Aß1-42 aggregates more rapidly and is deposited earlier in Alzheimer's disease plaques than Aß1-40 (Iwatsubo et al, 1994). Mutations in the gene for APP and in presenilin (PS1/2) genes are associated with early-onset familial Alzheimer's disease and with a selective increase in Aß1-42 (Borchelt et al, 1996; Mann et al, 1996; Scheuner et al, 1996; Kosaka et al, 1997; Younkin, 1998). Brain levels of Aß1-42 increase early in the development of Alzheimer's disease and are strongly correlated with cognitive decline (Cummings & Cotman, 1995; Naslund et al, 2000), and plasma levels of Aß1-42 are higher in elderly people who subsequently develop Alzheimer's disease than in those who remain free of dementia (Mayeux et al, 1999).

Virtually all individuals with Down's syndrome have neuropathological changes consistent with a diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease by the time they reach 40 years of age, including deposition of Aß in diffuse and neuritic plaques (Wisniewski, H. et al, 1995; Mann, 1988), and most will develop dementia by the end of their seventh decade of life (Lai & Williams, 1989). Despite the nearly universal occurrence of Alzheimer's disease pathology by middle age, there is wide variation in age at onset of dementia. The prevalence of Alzheimer's disease at age 65 has ranged between 30% and 75% (Zigman et al, 1997). Most studies have shown that the average age at onset of dementia is between 50 and 55 years, with a range from 38 to 70 years (Lai & Williams, 1989; Prasher & Krishnan, 1993). Methodological problems may account for some of the variation in estimated prevalence of Alzheimer's disease in Down's syndrome. Diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease in this population requires both documentation of clinically significant decline in cognitive and adaptive competence from previously attained levels of performance and documentation of the absence of any other condition that might cause declines in performance (Aylward et al, 1997). Both these requirements are particularly difficult to address for adults with Down's syndrome, given their lifelong intellectual disability. The wide range of premorbid levels of performance associated with differences in level of intellectual disability requires specific criteria for clinically significant decline indicative of dementia for each level of function, and these are just beginning to be developed. There is, as yet, no consensus on a set of cognitive assessment tasks or on diagnostic criteria for existing cognitive assessment batteries that can differentiate adults with Down's syndrome who do and do not have dementia in its early stages. Presently, most diagnoses of Alzheimer's disease in adults with Down's syndrome are made clinically, at relatively late stages of the disease, without systematic cognitive or functional testing over time.

The neuropathological manifestations of Alzheimer's disease in Down's syndrome have been attributed to triplication and overexpression of the gene for APP located on chromosome 21 (Rumble et al, 1989) and the increased risk of dementia in Down's syndrome may be mediated by an increased substrate for cellular production of Aß peptides. Recent neuropathological studies have shown that diffuse plaques, the most prevalent Alzheimer-type lesion seen in individuals with Down's syndrome before age 50, are not associated with dementia. Diffuse plaques contain non-fibrillar amyloid, appear at younger ages than do neuritic plaques, are not associated with neuronal degeneration, and do not appear to affect the structure and function of neurons. In contrast, increases in the numbers of neuritic plaques, containing substantial amounts of fibrillised Aß peptides, are observed in adults with Down's syndrome predominantly after 50 years of age and are associated with neuronal degeneration and loss of function (Wisniewski, T. et al, 1995). Examination of the age-specific prevalence of dementia in Down's syndrome supports the hypothesis that the clinical manifestations of Alzheimer's disease in Down's syndrome are closely associated with the development of these fibrillised plaques (Lai & Williams, 1989; Visser et al, 1997; Holland et al, 1998; Lai et al, 1999) (see Fig. 1). Although prevalence studies have employed varying sampling and diagnostic methods, there is remarkable agreement across studies that risk of Alzheimer's disease increases primarily after 50 years of age. In addition, not all adults with Down's syndrome will develop dementia even if they reach ages when the presence of high densities of neuritic plaques can be presumed. Thus, while triplication of the gene for APP may serve to increase diffuse plaques in adults with Down's syndrome, factors distinct from APP triplication must account for individual differences in susceptibility to the formation of fibrillised plaques and for the wide range in age at onset of dementia. A central task of the epidemiology of dementia in Down's syndrome is to identify factors that may influence risk of Alzheimer's disease by accelerating formation of Aß. Several avenues of investigation are suggested by existing findings and I will review the role of (a) atypical karyotypes; (b) genetic susceptibility factors; (c) gender and oestrogen deficiency; and (d) individual differences in Aß peptide levels.



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Fig. 1 Age-specific prevalence of dementia in adults with Down's syndrome. {diamondsuit}{diamondsuit}, data from Lai & Williams (1989); {blacktriangleup}- - -{blacktriangleup}, data from Visser et al (1997); {blacksquare}{blacksquare}, data from Lai et al (1999); {blacksquare}...{blacksquare}, data from Holland et al (1998).

 


   ATYPICAL KARYOTYPES
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 AMYLOID CASCADE HYPOTHESIS
 ATYPICAL KARYOTYPES
 GENETIC SUSCEPTIBILITY FACTORS
 GENDER AND OESTROGEN DEFICIENCY
 INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN...
 DISCUSSION
 Clinical Implications and...
 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 REFERENCES
 
There is evidence from case studies of adults with Down's syndrome that atypical karyotypes, including translocations, partial trisomies and varying degrees of mosaicism, are associated with improved survival and decreased risk of Alzheimer's disease. Prasher et al (1998) presented an interesting case of a 78-year-old woman with partial trisomy 21 [46,XX,rec(21)dup q, inv(21)(p12q22.1)] and conducted a comprehensive analysis of the clinical and molecular genetic correlates of the partial trisomy. While her general appearance was suggestive, but not typical, of the Down's syndrome phenotype, she experienced several of the common age-related medical conditions characteristic of Down's syndrome, including hypothyroidism, cataracts, hypotonia and hearing impairment. Analysis of gene sequences on chromosome 21 using fluorescent in situ hybridisation showed that the partial trisomy excluded the region containing the gene for APP, which was present in only two copies. There was no evidence of decline in cognitive or adaptive competence for the 5 years preceding her death from pneumonia, and no evidence of Alzheimer's disease found on magnetic resonance imaging or neuropathological assessment. Similarly there are two reports of women with Down's syndrome with 25% and 86% disomy for chromosome 21, respectively (Chicoine & McGuire, 1997; W. B. Zigman, personal communication, 2000). Both women had a characteristic Down's syndrome phenotype and typical age-related medical conditions, including hypothyroidism and cataracts. The woman with 25% disomy for chromosome 21 died at age 83 following hospitalisation for a hip fracture and was free of dementia at her death, while the woman with 86% disomy is still living at age 74 and shows no evidence of dementia based on evaluations of cognitive and adaptive behaviour.


   GENETIC SUSCEPTIBILITY FACTORS
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 AMYLOID CASCADE HYPOTHESIS
 ATYPICAL KARYOTYPES
 GENETIC SUSCEPTIBILITY FACTORS
 GENDER AND OESTROGEN DEFICIENCY
 INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN...
 DISCUSSION
 Clinical Implications and...
 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 REFERENCES
 
Four genes that increase risk of Alzheimer's disease have been identified. Mutations in three genes, APP, presenilin-1 (PS1) and presenilin-2 (PS2), are associated with early-onset familial forms of Alzheimer's disease that are transmitted as an autosomal dominant (Goate et al, 1991; Levy-Lehad et al, 1995; Sherrington et al, 1995). Homozygosity for a common variant of PS1, the 1-allele, has been associated with increased risk of Alzheimer's disease in some, but not at all, studies (Higuchi et al, 1996; Kehoe et al, 1996; Scott et al, 1996; Wragg et al, 1996). Only one study has examined the influence of PS1 alleles on risk of dementia in Down's syndrome. In that study of adults with Down's syndrome, there were no significant differences in allele frequencies between individuals with dementia and age-matched individuals without dementia (Tyrrell et al, 1999).

Polymorphisms in the gene for apolipoprotein E (APOE) have been associated with risk for the more common late-onset Alzheimer's disease, that is, with onset after 65 years of age. There are three common variants of the gene for APOE, encoded for by three alleles, {epsilon}2, {epsilon}3 and {epsilon}4. In numerous cross-sectional and case—control studies, patients with Alzheimer's disease have been found to be significantly more likely than their peers to have one or more copies of the APOE {epsilon}4 allele (Corder et al, 1993; Mayeux et al, 1993; Saunders et al, 1993). The APOE {epsilon}4 protein may act by increasing the rate of the process which leads to Alzheimer's disease, predisposing to greater accumulation of Aß in those with and without Alzheimer's disease (Roses et al, 1994; Hyman et al, 1995; Polvikoski et al, 1995). The presence of the least common allele, APOE {epsilon}2, has been associated with a delay in disease onset or even protection by most investigators (Corder et al, 1994; Roses et al, 1994).

Apolipoprotein E in Down's syndrome
The relation of APOE genotype to risk of Alzheimer's disease in Down's syndrome has been difficult to establish. All studies have consistently found that the presence of the APOE {epsilon}2 allele increases longevity and reduces the risk of dementia but the role of the {epsilon}4 allele has been controversial (Hardy et al, 1994; Royston et al, 1994; Martins et al, 1995; van Gool et al, 1995; Cosgrave et al, 1996; Lambert et al, 1996; Schupf et al, 1996; Prasher et al, 1997; Schupf et al, 1998; Sekijima et al, 1998; Tyrrell et al, 1998; Lai et al, 1999; Rubinszstein et al, 1999; Deb et al, 2000). Small sample sizes and, importantly, failure to consider differences in the age at onset of dementia among those with and without an {epsilon}4 allele may account for some of the negative findings. Since the effect of the {epsilon}4 allele is not expressed until midlife, inclusion of sufficient numbers of adults over 50 years of age and analysis using survival methods that can adjust for age and years of follow-up are important methodological considerations. Our group used survival methods for analysis and found that the presence of the {epsilon}4 allele was associated with earlier onset of dementia and greater decline in adaptive behaviour (Schupf et al, 1996). Compared with those with the APOE 3/3 genotype, adults with Down's syndrome with an {epsilon}4 allele were five times as likely to develop dementia by age 65, while no one with an {epsilon}2 allele developed dementia (see Fig. 2). Among affected individuals, mean age at onset of dementia was 53.3 years for those with the {epsilon}4 allele and 58.0 years for those with the 3/3 genotype. Four other studies found an increased frequency of the {epsilon}4 allele in adults with Down's syndrome and dementia compared with those with Down's syndrome without dementia (Martins et al, 1995; Sekijima et al, 1998; Rubinsztein et al, 1999; Deb et al, 2000).



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Fig. 2 Cumulative incidence of dementia in adults with Down's syndrome by apolipoprotein E (APOE) genotype [UNK]—[UNK] APOE 3/4, 4/4 genotypes; {blacksquare}{blacksquare} APOE 3/3 genotype; {blacktriangleup}{blacktriangleup} APOE 2/2, 2/3, 2/4 genotypes. Based on Schupf et al (1996), by kind permission of Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.

 

The results of other studies of APOE genotype in adults with Down's syndrome have been mixed. Several studies that found that the APOE {epsilon}2 allele decreased risk of dementia had sample sizes that were too small to demonstrate a significant effect of the {epsilon}4 allele (Hardy et al, 1994; Royston et al, 1994; Wisniewski, T., et al, 1995). Two case—control studies of adults with Down's syndrome compared allele frequencies in individuals with and without dementia and found no significant association between APOE genotype and Alzheimer's disease but did not adjust for age (van Gool et al, 1995; Prasher et al, 1997). One large study examined 100 adults with Down's syndrome (40-70 years of age) and used survival analyses to examine age at onset of dementia by APOE genotype (Lai et al, 1999). The cumulative incidence of dementia by age 65 was 55% for those with the APOE 2/3 genotype, 88% for those with the APOE 3/3 genotype and 100% for those with any {epsilon}4 allele. The effect of the {epsilon}4 allele was stronger at younger ages, consistent with findings from studies in the general population that the effect of the {epsilon}4 allele is to accelerate onset of Alzheimer's disease (Corder et al, 1993; Saunders et al, 1993; Meyer et al, 1998). Cumulative incidence to age 55 was 0.71 among those with an {epsilon}4 allele and 0.40 among those with the APOE 3/3 genotype. The authors suggested that the {epsilon}4 effect in their study may have been attenuated by the high rates of dementia at more advanced ages. They concluded that the effect of the {epsilon}4 allele may be dependent on the age of the study sample.

These findings are consistent with reduced Aß deposition (Polvikoski et al, 1995) and less plaque formation (Benjamin et al, 1994; Lippa et al, 1994) in those with an {epsilon}2 allele, and with acceleration of Aß pathology in those with an {epsilon}4 allele (Hymen et al, 1995; Polvikoski et al, 1995). The size of the {epsilon}4 effect, the relation of the presence of an {epsilon}4 allele to early mortality and the interaction of APOE genotype with other risk factors for dementia in Down's syndrome such as gender and level of learning disability remain to be resolved. This will require larger and older samples and analytic procedures which can provide better adjustment for age and other potential confounders.


   GENDER AND OESTROGEN DEFICIENCY
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 AMYLOID CASCADE HYPOTHESIS
 ATYPICAL KARYOTYPES
 GENETIC SUSCEPTIBILITY FACTORS
 GENDER AND OESTROGEN DEFICIENCY
 INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN...
 DISCUSSION
 Clinical Implications and...
 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 REFERENCES
 
Loss of gonadal hormones following menopause may be an important determinant of cognitive decline and risk for Alzheimer's disease in ageing women. Before menopause, oestrogen promotes the growth and prolongs survival of cholinergic neurons in brain regions serving cognitive function (Toran-Allerand et al, 1992), increases cholinergic activity, has antioxidant properties and regulates the metabolism of the APP to protect against the formation of Aß (Jaffe et al, 1994; Goodman et al, 1996; Petanceska et al, 2000).

In human studies, some, but not all, data show higher age-specific rates of Alzheimer's disease in women compared with men (Bachman et al, 1993) and approximately half the risk of Alzheimer's disease in women who have received oestrogen replacement therapy (Barrett-Conner & Kritz-Silverstein, 1993; Brenner et al, 1994; Henderson et al, 1994; Paganini-Hill & Henderson, 1994; Mortel & Meyer, 1995; Tang et al, 1996). Such findings support the hypothesis that oestrogen deficiency contributes to the aetiology of Alzheimer's disease. In contrast, randomised controlled clinical trials of oestrogen replacement therapy in women with moderate to severe Alzheimer's disease have failed to show cognitive improvement, suggesting that the major effect of oestrogen is to delay onset rather than reverse cognitive and functional decline (Henderson et al, 2000; Mulnard et al, 2000).

Gender differences and the effects of oestrogen in Down's syndrome have not been systematically investigated and more work is needed to clarify how hormonal risk factors may influence onset of dementia. Few studies have presented results separately for men and women. Studies that have compared women with men have found conflicting results, with different studies showing earlier onset (Raghaven et al, 1994; Lai et al, 1999), later onset (Farrer et al, 1997; Schupf et al, 1998) or no difference in age at onset (Visser et al, 1997; Lai & Williams, 1989) by gender. Two studies employed survival methods to examine age at onset distributions by gender, adjusting for both age and level of learning disability, and found conflicting results. My colleagues and I found that men with Down's syndrome were three times as likely as women to develop Alzheimer's disease by age 65 (see Fig. 3a); the effect of gender was observed in all age groups over 50 years (Schupf et al, 1998). Both men and women with Down's syndrome show elevations of follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinising hormone at puberty indicative of primary gonadal dysfunction, which appear to progress with age and be more frequent in men than in women (Hasen et al, 1980; Campbell et al, 1982; Hsiang et al, 1987; Hestnes et al, 1991). Thus, older men may not benefit from the relative preservation of oestrogen proposed to account for lower risk of Alzheimer's disease in men in the general population. In contrast, another study found that women with Down's syndrome were approximately twice as likely to develop dementia as men (Lai et al, 1999) (see Fig. 3b). In that study, the effect of gender was seen primarily at younger ages. In both studies, gender differences were largest in those with the APOE 3/3 genotype, suggesting that the high risk associated with the presence of the APOE {epsilon}4 allele can mask gender effects. The basis for the different results in studies of gender differences is not clear.



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Fig. 3 Cumulative incidence of dementia in adults with Down's syndrome by gender: (a) based on Schupf et al (1998); (b) based on Lai et al (1999), by kind permission of Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.

 

Only one published study has examined the influence of oestrogen deficiency on age at onset of dementia in women with Down's syndrome (Cosgrave et al, 1999). Menstrual profiles and risk of dementia in 143 women with Down's syndrome were studied. Twelve women were postmenopausal and diagnosed with dementia. There was a significant relationship between age at menopause and age at onset of dementia in this subsample (r=0.57). Although the sample size is small, the results are consistent with the hypothesis that higher endogenous oestrogen levels can lower risk of dementia by decreasing Aß peptide levels and maintaining cholinergic function in critical neuronal populations. If the association between age at menopause and onset of dementia can be confirmed and supporting hormonal data provided, oestrogen replacement therapy might prove to be an important intervention to delay onset of dementia.


   INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN Aß PEPTIDE LEVELS
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 AMYLOID CASCADE HYPOTHESIS
 ATYPICAL KARYOTYPES
 GENETIC SUSCEPTIBILITY FACTORS
 GENDER AND OESTROGEN DEFICIENCY
 INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN...
 DISCUSSION
 Clinical Implications and...
 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 REFERENCES
 
In Down's syndrome, as in Alzheimer's disease, deposition of Aß1-42 precedes the appearance of Aß1-40 (Iwatsubo et al, 1995). Aß1-42 was the predominant species in the brains of young (age <50 years) individuals with Down's syndrome; Aß1-40 deposits were observed only a decade or more later. Compared with age-matched controls from the general population, plasma levels of both Aß1-42 and Aß1-40 are increased in adults with Down's syndrome (Tokuda et al, 1997; Mehta et al, 1998), but one study found that this increase was not related to dementia status (Tokuda et al, 1997). Our group studied plasma Aß1-42 and Aß1-40 levels in 108 adults with Down's syndrome with and without dementia and compared them with plasma levels in 64 adults without dementia from the general population (Schupf et al, 2001). Aß1-42 and Aß1-40 levels were significantly higher in the adults with Down's syndrome than in controls from the general population (P=0.0001), and highest in adults with dementia and Down's syndrome, mean plasma levels of Aß1-42, but not Aß1-40, were higher in individuals with the APOE {epsilon}4 allele than in those without an {epsilon}4 allele, regardless of dementia status (see Fig. 4). The effect of the APOE {epsilon}4 allele on Aß1-42 levels may be related to acceleration of the rate of amyloid fibril formation (Ma et al, 1994) or diminished clearance of Aß (McNamara et al, 1998).



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Fig. 4 Plasma levels of Aß1-42 and Aß1-40 in adults with Down's syndrome with and without dementia by APOE genotype. {blacksquare}, any {epsilon}4 allele; {square}, no {epsilon}4 allele. From Schupf et al, 2001, with permission from Elsevier Science.

 


   DISCUSSION
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 AMYLOID CASCADE HYPOTHESIS
 ATYPICAL KARYOTYPES
 GENETIC SUSCEPTIBILITY FACTORS
 GENDER AND OESTROGEN DEFICIENCY
 INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN...
 DISCUSSION
 Clinical Implications and...
 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 REFERENCES
 
Factors that influence the formation of Aß, such as the APOE {epsilon}4 allele, oestrogen deficiency and high levels of Aß1-42 peptides, are associated with earlier onset of dementia in Down's syndrome, while factors that decrease the formation of Aß, such as the APOE {epsilon}2 allele or atypical karyotypes that reduce APP gene dose, are associated with lower mortality and reduced risk of dementia. An important task for future work will be to identify the sources of individual variation in premorbid Aß levels. Since 95% of people with Down's syndrome have triplication of APP associated with free trisomy, overexpression of APP cannot account for the differences in age at onset of dementia within this population. Rather, the joint effects of a variety of factors, including those reviewed here and others not yet identified, must influence the development of Alzheimer's disease. This suggests that we will need to focus on younger adults with Down's syndrome to identify causes of individual differences in lifespan development and to determine when they begin to exert their effects.


   Clinical Implications and Limitations
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 AMYLOID CASCADE HYPOTHESIS
 ATYPICAL KARYOTYPES
 GENETIC SUSCEPTIBILITY FACTORS
 GENDER AND OESTROGEN DEFICIENCY
 INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN...
 DISCUSSION
 Clinical Implications and...
 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 REFERENCES
 
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS

LIMITATIONS


   ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 AMYLOID CASCADE HYPOTHESIS
 ATYPICAL KARYOTYPES
 GENETIC SUSCEPTIBILITY FACTORS
 GENDER AND OESTROGEN DEFICIENCY
 INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN...
 DISCUSSION
 Clinical Implications and...
 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 REFERENCES
 
I thank my collaborators on this work: Richard Mayeux, MD, Warren Zigman, PhD, Wayne Silverman, PhD, Benjamin Tycko, MD, Pankaj Mehta, PhD, Edmund Jenkins, PhD, Deborah Pang, MPH, and Bindu Patel, MPH.


   REFERENCES
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 AMYLOID CASCADE HYPOTHESIS
 ATYPICAL KARYOTYPES
 GENETIC SUSCEPTIBILITY FACTORS
 GENDER AND OESTROGEN DEFICIENCY
 INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN...
 DISCUSSION
 Clinical Implications and...
 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 REFERENCES
 
Aylward, E. H., Burt, D. B., Thorpe, L. U., et al (1997) Diagnosis of dementia in individuals with intellectual disability. Journal of Intellectual Disability Research, 41, 152-164.[Medline]

Bachman, D. L., Wolf, P. A., Linn, R. T., et al (1993) Incidence of dementia and probable Alzheimer's disease in a general population: the Framingham Study. Neurology, 43, 515-519.[Abstract]

Barrett-Conner, E. & Kritz-Silverstein, D. (1993) Estrogen replacement therapy and cognitive function in older women. Journal of the American Medical Association, 269, 2637-2641.[Abstract]

Benjamin, R., Leake, A., McArthur, F. K., et al (1994) Protective effect of apoE {epsilon}2 in Alzheimer's disease. Lancet, 344, 473.

Borchelt, D. R., Thinakaran, G., Eckman, C. B., et al (1996) Familial Alzheimer's disease-linked presenilin I variants elevate Abetal-42/1-40 ratio in vitro and in vivo. Neuron, 17, 1005-1013.[Medline]

Brenner, D. E., Kukull, W. A., Stergachis, A., et al (1994) Postmenopausal estrogen replacement therapy and the risk of Alzheimer's disease: a population-based case—control study. American Journal of Epidemiology, 140, 262-267.[Abstract]

Campbell, W. A., Lowther, J., McKenzie, I., et al (1982) Serum gonadotrophins in Down syndrome. Journal of Medical Genetics, 19, 98-99.[Medline]

Chicoine, B. & McGuire, D. (1997) Longevity of a woman with Down syndrome: A case study. Mental Retardation, 35, 477-479.[Medline]

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Corder, E. H., Saunders, A. M., Risch, N. J., et al (1994) Protective effect of apolipoprotein E type 2 allele for late onset Alzheimer's disease. Nature Genetics, 7, 180-184.[Medline]

Cosgrave, M. P., Tyrrell, J., Dreja, H., et al (1996) Lower frequency of apolipoprotein E4 allele in an ‘elderly’ Down's syndrome population. Biological Psychiatry, 40, 811-813.[CrossRef][Medline]

Cosgrave, M. P., Tyrell, J., McCarron, M., et al (1999) Age at onset of dementia and age of menopause in women with Down's syndrome. Journal of Intellectual Disability Research, 43, 461-465.[CrossRef][Medline]

Cummings, B. & Cotman, C. (1995) Image analysis of beta-amyloid load in Alzheimer's disease and relation to dementia severity. Lancet, 346, 1524-1528.[CrossRef][Medline]

Deb, S., Braganza, J. & Norton, N. (2000) APOE {epsilon}4 influences the manifestation of Alzheimer's disease in adults with Down's syndrome. British Journal of Psychiatry, 176, 468-472.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Farrer, M. J., Crayton, L., Davies, G. E., et al (1997) Allelic variability in D21S11, but not in APP or APOE, is associated with cognitive decline in Down syndrome. Neuroreport, 8, 1645-1649.[Medline]

Goate, A., Chartier-Harlin, M. C., Mullan, M., et al (1991) Segregation of a missense mutation of the amyloid precursor protein gene with familial Alzheimer's disease. Nature, 349, 704-706.[CrossRef][Medline]

Goodman, Y., Bruce, A. J., Cheng, B., et al (1996) Estrogens attenuate and corticosterone exacerbates excitotoxicity, oxidative injury, and amyloid beta-peptide toxicity in hippocampal neurons. Journal of Neurochemistry, 66, 1836-1844.[Medline]

Hardy, J., Crook, R., Perry, R., et al (1994) ApoE genotype and Down's syndrome. Lancet, 343, 979-980.[Medline]

Hasen, J., Boyar, R. M. & Shapiro, L. R. (1980) Gonadal function in trisomy 21. Hormone Research, 12, 345-350.[Medline]

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Received for publication January 5, 2001. Revision received June 8, 2001. Accepted for publication June 13, 2001.