Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder characterized by neuronal and synaptic loss, neurofibrillary tangles in neuronal cytoplasm, and deposition of β-amyloid (Aβ) in extracellular, neuritic plaques. To date, only four genes have been unambiguously associated with AD, of which only one, Apolipoprotein E (
APOE), is associated with the common, late-onset form of AD [
1]. The
APOE4 allele (ε4) was first identified as a risk factor for late-onset AD in the early 1990s [
2,
3], and corroborated as such by a number of subsequent studies [
4]. However, the risk for AD imparted by one or two ε4 alleles is only partially penetrant: ~50% of AD patients do not carry an ε4 allele [
5]. Application of quantitative genetics methodology in fact supports the presence of 4 as yet unidentified AD-associated loci in the human genome, each expected to affect age of onset (AoO) as much or more than
APOE [
6]. Additional genetic risk factors for AD, therefore, remain to be found. Yet, a majority of studies have failed to find any evidence for association of their genetic target(s) with AD (e.g., recently, Chapuis et al. [
7] and [
8]), and large-scale meta-analyses, which combine the datasets of numerous studies, often negate or call into question any putative associations inferred from individual datasets [
9].
The disproportionate number of women who suffer from AD has long suggested that an aspect of reproductive physiology lies at the origin of AD pathogenesis. Recently, this idea was supported by the discovery that polymorphisms of the estrogen receptors alpha and beta were associated with AD, further implicating estradiol signaling in the pathogenesis of AD [
10,
11]. Several converging lines of evidence make another member of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis, luteinizing hormone (LH), a worthwhile candidate for genetic study: (1) LH is elevated in AD patients [
12-
14]; (2) LH crosses the blood-brain barrier [
15]; (3) in the brain, LH/chorionic gonadotropin receptors (LHCGR) are most concentrated in the hippocampus [
16]; (4) increased concentration of LH has been shown to increase Aβ secretion in a neuronal cell line while suppression of serum LH decreases brain Aβ in mice [
17]; and, (5) reduced serum LH has been shown to decrease cognitive loss and Aβ deposition in AβPP transgenic mice [
18]. Interestingly, through its regulation of steroidogenic enzymes, LH mediates neurosteroid production from cholesterol [
19]; both animal and human clinical studies strongly support the crucial neuroprotective functions of steroids in the brain [
20,
21]. Since APOE is a cholesterol transport protein [
22] involved in the transport of cholesterol into neurons [
23] for neurosteroid synthesis, a functional link exists between
APOE and LH signaling.
Numerous polymorphisms of LH beta-subunit (
LHB) and
LHCGR have been documented (for comprehensive reviews, see [
24] and [
25]). While the majority of mutations underlying these polymorphisms are associated with rare reproductive disorders, a few are relatively more common and worthy of exploring for their association with AD. Two non-synonymous single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in
LHB are collectively referred to as variant LH (vLH) [
26]. In a study of 40 Japanese women, vLH carriers exhibited greater LH secretion in response to GnRH stimulation [
27]. In breast cancer patients, an LQ-insert in exon 1 of
LHCGR was associated with a significantly earlier age of onset and worse survival rate [
27]. Exon 10 of
LHCGR is required for binding of LH [
28] and is the location of 2 relatively common non-synonymous SNPs [
29]. The functional consequences of the mutations underlying the other
LHB and
LHCGR polymorphisms scored in our study, however, are largely unknown. Therefore, in this study we examined polymorphmic sites of LH β-subunit (
LHB) and
LHCGR, as well as gene-gene interactions between
LHB,
LHCGR, and
APOE for association with AD. Our results suggest that a specific LHCGR allele significantly decreases the risk of AD in individuals carrying an APOE ε4 allele.