Genetic risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease - CALHM1

The newly discovered gene called calcium homeostasis modulator 1 (CALHM1), protein produced from the gene acts as Calcium channel. Research evidence shows that different variants of the gene also influence the levels of amyloid-ß peptides. The risk gene leads to a partial loss of function, which means that less calcium gets into the cell and it weakens the signals normally regulated by calcium. The researchers determined that one of these signals controls the levels of amyloid peptides, the building blocks of the characteristic senile plaques.

Researchers at The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research and Albert Einstein College of Medicine found, a variant of CALHM1 is found more frequently in people with Alzheimer’s disease than in those without. They estimate that a single copy of that variant, which results in a proline-to-leucine amino acid substitution (designated as p86L because it occurs at codon 86), increases one’s chance of getting late-onset Alzheimer’s disease by 1.44-fold.

Other genitic risk factors identified for late-onset Alzheimer’s is Apo-E4. Just one copy of this gene variant triples the risk of the disease.

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2 Responses to “Genetic risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease - CALHM1”

  1. The Covert Rationing Blog » Blog Archive » Medical Grand Rounds, Vol 4, No. 41 Says:

    [...] Dr Penna reports on new information on Genetic Risk Factors for Alzheimer’s Disease. If you decide to get the test, don’t tell the government or United [...]

  2. Gene Genie #34: Summertime and the blogging is easy « MicrobiologyBytes Says:

    [...] The rest of the submissions were more of a medical nature. Dr Penna wrote about the newly discovered gene called calcium homeostasis modulator 1 (CALHM1), which appears to be a genetic risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease. [...]

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