Mutations
SORL1 A1584A (SNP 23)
Other Names: SNP 23
Overview
Clinical
Phenotype: Alzheimer's Disease
Position: (GRCh38/hg38):Chr11:121605213 T>A
Position: (GRCh37/hg19):Chr11:121475922 T>A
dbSNP ID: rs3824968
Coding/Non-Coding: Coding
DNA
Change: Substitution
Expected Protein
Consequence: Silent
Codon
Change: GCT to GCA
Reference
Isoform: SORL1 Isoform 1 (2214 aa)
Genomic
Region: Exon 34
Findings
This synonymous variant (A1584A, “SNP 23”) is among those initially described by Rogaeva et al. in 2007 (Rogaeva et al., 2007), when the T allele was reported to be associated with an increased risk of AD in Caucasians. Subsequent studies failed to confirm this association (Bettens et al., 2008; Cellini et al., 2009; Cong et al., 2018; Elias-Sonnenschein et al., 2013; Kölsch et al., 2009; Laumet et al., 2010; Lee et al., 2007; Lee et al., 2008; Li et al., 2008; Liu et al., 2017; Minster et al., 2008; Reitz et al., 2011; Reynolds et al., 2010; Schjeide et al., 2009; Verheijen et al., 2016; Wang et al., 2016). Although one meta-analysis reported a nominal association of the T allele with an increased risk of AD, this relationship no longer reached statistical significance when the Rogaeva study was removed from the analysis (Liu et al., 2009).
It is not clear whether SNP 23 associates with AD in Asian populations. Four studies found no association—two in Han Chinese (Chou et al., 2016; Ning et al., 2010) and two in Japanese cohorts (Shibata et al., 2008; Wen et al., 2013). One study did report that the A allele nominally increased AD risk in Han Chinese, but the p value (0.042) was not adjusted for multiple comparisons (Tan et al., 2009). Another study found that the T allele increased AD risk in a Japanese cohort; when the subjects were stratified by APOE genotype, the association was maintained only in the subset who did not carry an E4 allele (Kimura et al., 2009). While three meta-analyses concluded that the SNP23 A allele is associated with an increased risk of AD in Asian populations (Ning et al., 2010; Reitz et al., 2011; Wang et al., 2016), a fourth did not find an association (Cong et al., 2018).
The variant did not associate with AD in a Mexican cohort of mixed Amerindian, Caucasian, and African ancestry (Toral-Rios et al., 2022) or in meta-analyses that pooled data from multiple ancestries (Jin et al., 2013; Wang et al., 2016).
This variant was not associated with incident AD in a majority Dutch sample (Liu et al., 2009), with age of onset of AD in a Swedish sample (Reynolds et al., 2010), MCI in a Han Chinese cohort (Chou et al., 2016), or cognitive impairment—MCI or dementia of unspecified etiology—in the Women’s Health Initiative Memory Study (Driscoll et al., 2019).
Heterozygous and homozygous carriers have been found among both AD cases and controls (Holstege et al., 2017).
This variant is classified as likely benign by criteria of Holstege and colleagues (Holstege et al., 2017).
Endophenotypes
Several studies have examined the relationship between SORL1 genotype and levels of CSF biomarkers, with inconsistent results. While two studies reported that the A allele of SNP23 was associated with lower concentrations of Aβ42 in Caucasian subjects with AD (Alexopoulos, et al., 2011; Guo et al., 2012), other studies found no association in AD patients (Elias-Sonnenschein et al., 2013; Kölsch et al., 2008; Louwersheimer et al., 2015) or in subjects across the spectrum from normal cognition through mild cognitive impairment to AD (Kauwe et al., 2010; Reynolds et al., 2010). The SNP23 variant was not associated with levels of Aβ40 (Kölsch et al., 2008) or tau (Elias-Sonnenschein et al., 2013; Louwersheimer et al., 2015; Reynolds et al., 2010).
Studies of the association of SNP23 with brain atrophy similarly have yielded varied results, which may be due to differences in the brain regions examined, stage of disease, or ancestry of the subjects. SNP23 did not associate with general cerebral atrophy or hippocampal atrophy in white and African-American participants in the MIRAGE study (Cuenco et al., 2008); with atrophy of the hippocampus, the parahippocampal gyrus, the entorhinal cortex, the middle temporal gyrus or the posterior cingulate in ADNI participants (Yin et al., 2016); or hippocampal atrophy in German AD patients (Louwersheimer et al., 2015). In a group of Chinese adults ranging in age from 21 to 92 years, the A allele was associated with smaller gray matter volumes in the right posterior cingulate, left middle occipital, medial frontal, and superior temporal gyri (Huang et al., 2016).
SNP23 did not associate with MRI of biomarkers of cerebrovascular disease in MIRAGE participants (Cuenco et al., 2008).
This variant did not associate with cognitive function in Dutch (Liu et al., 2009), German (Louwersheimer et al., 2015), Scottish (Houlihan et al., 2009), or Swedish (Reynolds et al., 2013) studies.
In a study investigating associations between neuropsychiatric symptoms and selected gene variants in Taiwanese Alzheimer’s patients, homozygous carriers of the T allele scored higher on measures of frontal syndrome symptoms—euphoria and disinhibition—in the Neuropsychiatric Inventory Questionnaire than individuals who carried the A allele (Huang et al., 2020).
Linkage Disequilibrium
SNP 23 is in linkage disequilibrium with several other variants, including rs2070045 (SNP 19), rs1699102 (SNP 22), rs2282649 (SNP 24), rs1010159 (SNP 25) in cohorts of European ancestry (Jin et al., 2013; Rogaeva et al., 2007; Young et al., 2015); rs2070045 (SNP 19), rs1699102 (SNP 22), rs2282649 (SNP 24), and rs1010159 (SNP 25) in Asian cohorts (Jin et al., 2013; Ning et al., et al., 2010); rs2282649 (SNP 24) and rs1010159 (SNP 25) in an African American family dataset (Rogaeva et al., 2007); and rs2282649 (SNP 24) and rs1010159 (SNP 25) in a Hispanic family dataset (Rogaeva et al., 2007).
Functional Consequences
In neurons derived from human induced pluripotent stem cells, the SNP23 genotype did not influence SORL1 expression in response to BDNF (Young et al, 2015).
Levels of wild-type and A1584A SORL1 transcripts were similar in the prefrontal cortices in autopsy specimens from AD donors and controls (Alachkar et al., 2008).
Table
Risk Allele(s) | N Cases | Controls |
aAllele frequency Cases | Controls |
Reported association measurements | Ancestry (Cohort) |
Reference(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Large-scale studies and meta-analyses | |||||
A | b7009 | 9335 | OR = 0.99 [CI: 0.90-1.08] p = 0.80 |
Caucasian and Asian |
Cong et al., 2018 |
|
b6035 | 7908 | OR = 0.98 [CI: 0.89-1.09] p = 0.77 |
Caucasian | |||
b974 | 1427 | OR = 1.01 [CI: 0.78-1.31] p = 0.94 |
Asian | |||
T | 11837 | 20022 | OR = 0.96 [CI: 0.90-1.03] p = 0.22 |
Caucasian, Asian, African American |
Jin et al., 2013 |
|
T | 2032 | 5328 | OR = 1.02 [0.94-1.10] p = 0.85 |
French Caucasian | Laumet et al., 2010 (GWAS) |
|
T | 6222 | 14116 | OR = 1.11 [CI: 1.01-1.23] cp = 0.04 |
Caucasian (Rotterdam Study, Erasmus Rucphen Family Study) |
Liu et al., 2009 (meta-analysis) |
|
A | 17008 | 37154 | p = 0.1638 | European descent (IGAP) |
Liu et al., 2017 |
|
A | 984 | 1320 | OR = 1.29 [CI: 1.14-1.46] p < 10-4 |
Chinese, Japanese |
Ning et al., 2010 |
|
T | all = 20247 | OR = 1.02 [CI: 0.95-1.09] p = 0.62 |
White |
Reitz et al., 2011
|
|
all = 16307 | OR = 0.99 [CI: 0.95-1.03] p = 0.62 |
White (Rogaeva, 2007 excluded) |
|||
all = 1753 | OR = 0.79 [CI: 0.69-0.92] p < 0.001 |
Asian | |||
T | all = 5506 | OR = 1.12 [CI: 1.02-1.22] p not reported |
European | Reynolds et al., 2010 (meta-analysis) |
|
A | 1255 | 1938 | 0.31 | 0.30 | OR = 1.04 [CI: 0.92 – 1.18] p = 0.5 |
European (European Early-Onset Dementia Consortium) |
Verheijen et al., 2016 |
A | all = 16268 | OR = 1.03 [CI: 0.95-1.12] p = 0.447 |
Asian and Caucasian |
Wang et al., 2016 |
|
OR = 1.20 [CI: 1.06-1.35] p < 0.05 |
Asian | ||||
OR = 0.98 [CI: 0.93-1.03] reported not significant |
Caucasian | ||||
Other studies | |||||
A | 550 | 634 | N.A. | 0.28 | reported not significant | Belgian (Engelborghs et al., 2003) |
Bettens et al., 2008 |
A | 251 | 358 | 0.306 | 0.283 | p = 0.38 | Italian (Department of Neurological and Psychiatric Sciences, University of Florence) |
Cellini et al., 2009 |
T | 791 | 395 | 0.358 | 0.375 | OR = 0.93 [CI: N.A.] p = 0.409 |
Han Chinese (Taipei Veterans General Hospital and Taichung Veterans General Hospital, Taiwan) |
Chou et al., 2016 |
A | 117 | 0 | 0.2051 | N.A. | Saudi Arabian (King Faisal Specialist Hospital & Research Center) |
El Bitar et al., 2019 | |
A | 673 | 568 | 0.36 | 0.36 | p = 0.42 | Finnish (Finnish-AD) |
Elias-Sonnenschein et al., 2013 |
TT vs. TA+AA | TT/TA/AA AD: 0.44/0.39/0.17 CTRL: 0.42/0.43/0.15 |
OR = 0.93 [CI: 0.74–1.12] p = 0.51 |
|||
A | 640 | 1268 | 0.298 | 0.295 | Dutch (Rotterdam Study, Amsterdam Dementia Cohort, Alzheimer Centrum Zuidwest Nederland (ACZN), 100-plus Study) |
Holstege et al., 2017 | |
T | 436 | 451 | 0.503 | 0.449 | OR = 1.57 [CI: 1.16-2.12] p = 0.022 |
Japanese (Osaka University Graduate School of Medicine, Choju Medical Institute of Fukushimura Hospital) |
Kimura et al., 2009 |
APOE E4+ 213 | 72 |
0.495 | 0.451 | p = 0.362 | |||
APOE E4- 223 | 379 |
0.511 | 0.449 | OR = 1.57 [CI: 1.06-2.32] p = 0.035 |
|||
T | 349 | 483 | 0.31 | 0.30 | p = 0.80 | German (German Competence Network Dementias) |
Kölsch et al., 2009 |
T | 178 | 194 | 0.283 | 0.303 | p = 0.5616 | Caribbean Hispanic (WHICAP) |
Lee et al., 2007 |
88 | 158 | 0.140 | 0.155 | p = 0.6429 | African-American (WHICAP) |
||
30 | 76 | 0.385 | 0.264 | p = 0.1049 | White, non-Hispanic European (WHICAP) |
||
A | 103 | 93 | 0.316 | 0.259 | p = 0.2736 | White, non-Hispanic (autopsy-confirmed) |
Lee et al., 2008 |
T | 998 | 1033 | 0.311 | 0.299 | p = 0.416 | Caucasian (Washington University Knight ADRC, Cardiff University) |
Li et al., 2008 |
A | 1001 | 1007 | 0.293 | 0.305 | p = 0.420 | Caucasian American (University of Pittsburgh ADRC) |
Minster et al., 2008 |
A | 144 | 476 | OR = 1.49 [CI: 1.12-1.98] p = 0.058 |
Chinese (Shanghai Mental Health Center) |
Ning et al., 2010 | |
1231 | 2184 | OR = 1.08 [CI: 0.97-1.19] p = 0.16 |
Swedish (Swedish Twin Registry, Mölndal Prospective Dementia Study, longitudinal geriatric study from Piteå, Sweden) |
Reynolds et al., 2010 | ||
T | 1554 | 2333 | all = 0.292 | OR = 1.15 [CI: 1.04–1.27] p 0.0075 |
Combined Caucasian case-control datasets (North European, Mayo Jacksonville, Mayo Rochester, Mayo autopsy) |
Rogaeva et al., 2007 |
1400 | 2113 | all = 0.309 | OR = 1.12 [CI: 1.01–1.24] p = 0.031 |
Combined Mayo series | ||
178 | 242 | all = 0.125 | OR = 2.16 [CI: 1.37 - 3.40] p = 0.00073 |
North European (case-control) |
||
549 | 477 | all = 0.296 | OR = 1.31 [CI: 1.08–1.59] p = 0.006 |
Mayo Jacksonville | ||
433 | 1217 | all = 0.321 | OR = 1.09 [CI: 0.93–1.29] p = 0.287 |
Mayo Rochester | ||
423 | 430 | all = 0.302 | OR = 1.12 [CI: 0.91–1.37] p = 0. 0.294 |
Mayo autopsy | ||
111 | 114 | all = 0.345 | OR = 1.09 [CI: 0.74 - 1.61] p = 0.672 |
Israeli-Arab [case-control] (Wadi Area population study) |
||
321 | 342 (53) |
all = 0.264 | p = 0.0031 | North European [family] |
||
605 | 517 (78) |
all = 0.288 | p = 0.513 | Caribbean Hispanic [family] |
||
279 | 252 (81) |
all = 0.333 | p = 0.680 | Caucasian [family] (MIRAGE) |
||
244 | 127 (26) |
all = 0.193 | p = 0.818 | African-American [family] (MIRAGE) |
||
T | 407 families | OR = 1.03 [CI: N.A.] p = 0.33 |
Mixed (NIMH, NIA, NCRAD, CAG) |
Schjeide et al., 2009 | |
Caucasian subset 399 families |
OR = 1.02 [CI: N.A.] p = 0.37 |
Caucasian (NIMH, NIA, NCRAD, CAG) |
|||
T | 180 | 130 | 0.525 | 0.565 | p = 0.59 | Japanese | Shibata et al., 2008 |
>= 65, APOE E4+ 46 | 9 |
0.489 | 0.444 | p = 0.80 | |||
>= 65, APOE E4- 58 | 25 |
0.517 | 0.64 | p = 0.39 | |||
< 65, APOE E4+ 29 | 24 |
0.586 | 0.563 | p = 0.99 | |||
< 65, APOE E4- 47 | 72 |
0.532 | 0.556 | p = 0.68 | |||
A | 223 | 263 | 0.331 | 0.394 | OR = 1.31 [CI: 1.01-1.71] p = 0.042 |
Han Chinese | Tan et al., 2009 |
T | 156 | 221 | 0.39 | 0.33 | reported not significant | Mexican (Geriatric Clinic, “Mocel” General Hospital, Mexico City; Instituto Nacional de Neurología y Neurocirugía, Hospital de Alta Especialidad de Ixtapaluca; Geriatric Center, Querétaro) |
Toral-Rios et al., 2022 |
TT+AT vs. AA | TT/TA/AA AD: 0.24/0.49/0.26 CTRL: 0.21/0.49/0.29 |
OR = 1.123 [CI: 0.704–1.791] p = 0.626 |
|||
T | 213 |370 | 0.497 | 0.493 | OR = 0.98 [CI: 0.77-1.25] p = 0.883 |
Japanese [autopsy confirmed] (Japanese ADNI) |
Wen et al., 2013 |
aAllele frequencies as reported by study authors or calculated by Alzforum curators from data provided in the study, assuming heterozygosity if not explicitly stated in the paper.
bCalculated by Alzforum curator from data supplied in paper; numbers of subjects are total for entire study and may not equal the number successfully genotyped for this particular variant.
cLiu (19584446). No longer significant if Rogaeva removed from meta-analysis.
This table is meant to convey the range of results reported in the literature. As specific analyses, including co-variates, differ among studies, this information is not intended to be used for quantitative comparisons, and readers are encouraged to refer to the original papers. Thresholds for statistical significance were defined by the authors of each study. (Significant results are in bold.) Note that data from some cohorts may have contributed to multiple studies, so each row does not necessarily represent an independent dataset. While every effort was made to be accurate, readers should confirm any values that are critical for their applications.
Last Updated: 18 Jul 2024
References
Paper Citations
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Further Reading
No Available Further Reading
Protein Diagram
Primary Papers
- Rogaeva E, Meng Y, Lee JH, Gu Y, Kawarai T, Zou F, Katayama T, Baldwin CT, Cheng R, Hasegawa H, Chen F, Shibata N, Lunetta KL, Pardossi-Piquard R, Bohm C, Wakutani Y, Cupples LA, Cuenco KT, Green RC, Pinessi L, Rainero I, Sorbi S, Bruni A, Duara R, Friedland RP, Inzelberg R, Hampe W, Bujo H, Song YQ, Andersen OM, Willnow TE, Graff-Radford N, Petersen RC, Dickson D, Der SD, Fraser PE, Schmitt-Ulms G, Younkin S, Mayeux R, Farrer LA, St George-Hyslop P. The neuronal sortilin-related receptor SORL1 is genetically associated with Alzheimer disease. Nat Genet. 2007 Feb;39(2):168-77. PubMed.
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