Our most significant finding was with SNPs encompassing the
TPPP region.
TPPP SNPs showed association signals in both the Norwegian and the UK dataset. However, the strongest association signals were seen with different SNPs, i.e. a rare variant in the Norwegian cohort and a more common variant in the UK dataset. However, the LD analyses indicated clear haplotype patterns, and globally haplotype analyses showed association in both cohorts. This could potentially indicate that these SNPs pick up a common causal risk variant that had not been included in our current analyses. Notably, the region just centromeric of the association peak was poorly covered by SNPs in our combined
meta-analysis.
Interestingly, the
TPPP gene, encoding the tubulin polymerization promoting protein, is mainly expressed in the brain. The TPPP protein plays a pivotal role in the myelination of oligodendrocytes (Fu et al., 2019) and has been shown to correlate with shortened disease duration in multiple sclerosis (Höftberger et al., 2010). This may indicate a role for TPPP in myelin repair. Hence, changes in this gene may underlie neurological abnormalities and may be involved in pathologies like
Alzheimer's disease.