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Genes Influence Memory in Families with Alzheimer's Disease
By Kathy Stone, the
American
Academy
of
Neurology
February
10, 2004
ST. PAUL
,
Minn.
– Genes play a strong role in how well our memory works, according to a
study of families with more than one person with Alzheimer's disease. The
study is published in the February 10 issue of Neurology, the scientific
journal of the
American
Academy
of Neurology. Located in DNA and RNA, a gene is a unit of inheritance that
determines one or more traits.
"These results are exciting because if we can identify the genes that
are responsible for memory, they may lead us to identifying more of the
genes that contribute to Alzheimer's disease," said study authors
Joseph H. Lee, DrPH, and Richard Mayeux, MD, MSc, of the Taub Institute at
Columbia
University
in
New York
,
N.Y.
The researchers studied 1,036 people from 266 families, mainly in the
Dominican Republic
and
Puerto Rico
. Most of the families had more than one person living with Alzheimer's
disease in the extended family, including siblings, aunts, uncles, cousins
and others.
All of the study participants were tested for memory, attention, abstract
reasoning, language and visual-spatial ability. The results were then
analyzed to determine how much of the individual's ability in those areas
was due to genetics. Memory performance was found to be strongly
influenced by genetics.
"We found that about half of the variation in memory performance
among individuals is due to genetics," Mayeux said. "The other
half is due to environmental factors such as education. Considering that
even with dominant traits, such as a genetic mutation that leads to early
onset Alzheimer's, the genetic influence actually amounts to about 80
percent, this shows that memory performance has a strong genetic
influence."
The influence of genetics was not as strong in the areas of attention,
abstract reasoning, language and visual-spatial ability. The result with
memory performance was found even after excluding the memory scores for
the people with Alzheimer's.
The study participants were also tested to see what form of the gene
apolipoprotein E, called APOE, they carried. One form of the gene has been
shown to increase the risk of developing Alzheimer's. The researchers then
re-analyzed the results while controlling for the influence of APOE.
"The estimates of the amount of influence that genes have on memory
abilities changed very little, which suggests that APOE doesn't have much
affect on memory performance," Lee said.
More research is needed to determine whether the study results apply to
people without multiple family members with Alzheimer's disease, Mayeux
said. He also noted that the study participants differ from the general
U.S.
population, especially in years of education.
"Because public education was limited in the
Dominican Republic
from 1930 to 1961, people in this study had an average of six years of
education," he said. "Since education has been shown to protect
against the development of Alzheimer's, the risk of Alzheimer's in this
study group may be higher than in the
U.S.
population."
The study was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health,
the Charles S. Robertson Memorial Gift for Alzheimer's Disease Research
from the Banbury Fund and the Blanchette Hooker Rockefeller
Foundation.
The
American
Academy
of Neurology, an association of more than 18,000 neurologists and
neuroscience professionals, is dedicated to improving patient care through
education and research. A neurologist is a doctor with specialized
training in diagnosing, treating and managing disorders of the brain and
nervous system such as stroke, Alzheimer's disease, epilepsy, Parkinson's
disease, autism and multiple sclerosis.
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