Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a devastating
neurodegenerative disorder characterized by
extracellular neuritic plaques and intracellular
neurofibrillary tangles in brain parenchyma.
Alpha-1-antichymotrypsin (ACT) is a component of
plaque cores, can bind to Abeta, and has been
proposed as a possible candidate gene for AD
susceptibility. The genetic association between
the ACT codon -17*A allele of the signal peptide
polymorphism and AD has been shown in some, but
not in all studies. One hypothesis is that the ACT
codon -17*A allele is in linkage disequilibrium
with unknown functional mutation(s) in the ACT
gene. This study was undertaken to identify new
mutation(s) in the ACT gene by PCR-SSCP-sequencing
and, in conjunction with known mutations, to
assess their role in affecting the risk of AD. A
total of seven new point mutations were observed:
5'UTR(A-->G), Asp128Asn(G-->A), Ser250Ser(C-->T),
Leu301Pro(T-->C), Thr324Thr(A-->G), G-->A in
intron 4, and 3'UTR C-->A. Of these, mutations at
codon 250, codon 324, intron 4 and 3'UTR showed a
frequency of 1% or more. Of the known mutations,
Thr-17Ala(A-->G), Lys76Lys(A-->G) and
Leu241Leu(G-->A) occur at a polymorphic level. The
ACT codon -17*A allele was associated with
increased risk of AD (OR for AA vs TT:
1.71; 95% CI: 1.16-2.53; P=0.007),
especially in the presence of the APOE*4 allele
(OR for AA vs TT: 2.35; 95% CI:
1.13-4.85; P=0.02). The codon 241*A allele and the
codon 250*T allele were associated with protective
effects against AD (OR: 0.36; 95% CI:
0.13-0.86; P=0.02) (OR:0.39; 95% CI:
0.18-0.85; P=0.02). irrespective of the APOE*4
status. The codon 324*G allele was associated with
a marginal protective effect (OR:0.57; 95%
CI: 0.26-1.26; P=0.17). While the codon 241*A
allele was in linkage disequilibrium with the
codon -17*A allele, the codon 250*T and codon
324*G alleles were non-randomly associated with
the codon -17*T allele. In contrast, the codon
76*G (OR:1.34; 95% CI: 0.92-1.95;
P=0.13), codon 227*G (OR:3.96; 95% CI:
0.83-18.8; P=0.08) and intron 4*G (OR:1.47;
95% CI: 0.88-2.29; P=0.15) alleles were
associated with a modest risk of AD, and all were
in linkage disequilibrium with the codon -17*A
allele. EH-based haplotype analysis showed that
certain haplotypes are associated with either
higher or lower risk of AD. Our data indicate that
the ACT gene harbors several potentially important
variable sites, which are associated with either
an increased or decreased risk of AD. The
non-random combination of risk and protective
alleles may explain, in part, why the association
studies regarding the ACT codon -17*A have been
inconsistent, especially if the frequency of other
ACT mutations varies between populations.