BACKGROUND: Protein truncating variants (PTVs) in SORL1 are observed almost exclusively in Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) cases, but the effect of rare SORL1 missense variants is unclear. METHODS: To identify high-priority missense variants (HPVs), we applied ‘domain mapping of disease mutations’ for the 637 unique coding SORL1 variants detected in 18,959 AD-cases and 21,893 non-demented controls. RESULTS: In this sample, PTVs and HPVs associated with respectively a 35- and 10-fold increased risk of early onset AD and 17- and 6-fold increased risk of overall AD. The median age at onset (AAO) of PTV- and HPV-carriers was 62 and 64 years, and APOE-genotype contributed to AAO-variability. The median AAO of PTV- and HPV-carriers is ~8–10 years earlier than wild-type SORL1 carriers, matched for APOE-genotype. Specific HPVs are highly penetrant and lead to earlier AAOs than PTVs, suggesting possible dominant negative effects. CONCLUSION: Our results justify a debate on whether HPV carriers should be considered for clinical counseling. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s13024-025-00907-z.
Journal article
2025-12-01T00:00:00+00:00
20
Age at onset, Alzforum mutation database, Alzheimer’s disease, Disease risk, Domain-mapping disease-mutations, Genetics, Penetrance, Rare variants, SORL1, SORLA