Genetic factors for the development of Alzheimer disease in the Cherokee Indian
R. N. Rosenberg, R. W. Richter, R. C. Risser, K. Taubman, I. Prado-Farmer, E. Ebalo, J. Posey, D. Kingfisher, D. Dean, M. F. Weiner, D. Svetlik, P. Adams, L. S. Honig, C. M. Cullum, F. V. Schaefer and G. D. Schellenberg
Department of Neurology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, USA.
OBJECTIVE: To study the relationship between the genetic degree of Cherokee
ancestry, the apolipoprotein E *E4 (APOE*E4) allele type, and the
development of Alzheimer disease (AD) in individuals from the Cherokee
Nation who reside in northeastern Oklahoma. SETTING: Alzheimer disease
center satellite clinic and university departments of neurology,
psychiatry, and academic computing. DESIGN: Standardized dementia
evaluations based on criteria from the National Institute of Neurological
and Communicative Disorders and Stroke and the Alzheimer's Disease and
Related Disorders Association were performed on 26 patients aged 65 years
or older to establish a diagnosis of AD. Twenty-six control subjects were
recruited and similarly assessed. The APOE allele type determinations were
obtained on all patients and control subjects. Appropriate statistical
analyses were used to compare the genetic degree of Cherokee ancestry, the
APOE allele type, and the development of AD. RESULTS: The data indicated
that as the genetic degree of Cherokee Indian ancestry increased, the
representation of AD decreased. The 9 patients with AD with a greater than
50% genetic degree of Cherokee ancestry constituted 35% of the group with
AD. The 17 remaining patients with AD who were less than 50% Cherokee
constituted 65% of the group with AD. In contrast, 17 (65%) of the control
subjects were more than 50% Cherokee; only 9 (35%) were less than 50%
Cherokee. These percentages of AD were not changed by the *E4 allele. This
inverse relationship between the genetic degree of Cherokee ancestry and
AD, independent of the APOE*E4 allele status, diminished with increasing
age, suggesting an age-related protective effect of being Cherokee. For a
decrease of 10% in Cherokee ancestry, the odds of developing AD are
estimated to be 9.00 times greater at age 65 years but only 1.34 times
greater at age 80 years. CONCLUSIONS: A greater genetic degree of Cherokee
ancestry reduces the risk of developing AD and, thus, seems protective.
This protective genetic factor is independent of APOE allele type and
diminishes with age.