Researchers analyzed data from ancestrally diverse cohorts in the Alzheimer's Disease Sequencing Project to understand how genetic variants affect Alzheimer's disease risk. They used a new framework called Personalized Feature Statistics to look at these effects at an individual level. This approach allowed them to see how genetic risks vary across the spectrum of genetic ancestry rather than treating ancestry as a simple category.
The study found that Alzheimer's risk variants exist on a spectrum from those that work the same across all groups to those that depend on specific ancestry backgrounds. This method also created distinct sets of selected variants that change based on each person's ancestry. These findings help profile how genetic effects are heterogeneous across different populations.
The authors note that how these variant effects vary across diverse populations remains poorly understood. While the proposed method is broadly applicable to other features like environmental factors, the extent of this variation needs more study. This research provides a tool for better understanding individual genetic risks in Alzheimer's disease.