Neurocompute Narrative Velocity Map
NEUROCOMPUTE VISUAL SYSTEM

Open the Narrative
Velocity Map

Explore the Parkinson’s research intelligence diagram before entering the Neurocompute platform.

NC
Neurocompute
AI Parkinson’s Intelligence Terminal
RESEARCH PAPER

Cross-disease genetic and epigenetic architecture of the MOBP locus shows convergence in ALS-PSP.

PMID
41929081
Journal
bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology
Publication Date
2026-03-27
Grade
E

AI Summary

This study identifies a regulatory methylation site (cg15069948) at the MOBP locus that colocalises with ALS and PSP risk variants and links genotype to altered MOBP methylation/expression in oligodendrocytes, but finds no genotype–methylation effects in Parkinson's or MSA.

Why It Matters

The work highlights oligodendrocyte/MOBP dysregulation as a shared neurodegeneration signal and a possible biomarker/target, but provides limited direct, PD-specific mechanistic or therapeutic leads for Parkinson's drug discovery.

Abstract

Myelin oligodendrocyte basic protein (MOBP) is an abundant oligodendrocyte gene implicated in multiple neurodegenerative diseases. Genetic variation at the MOBP locus has been associated with risk for progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP), amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTD), corticobasal degeneration (CBD), Alzheimer's disease (AD), Lewy body dementia (LBD), and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD). Epigenetically, MOBP promoter hypermethylation and reduced expression have been reported in multiple system atrophy (MSA). Although MOBP is thought to play a role in oligodendrocyte morphology and myelin structure, how genetic and epigenetic variation at this locus influences gene regulation and contributes to disease risk remains poorly understood across neurodegenerative disorders. Here, we investigated whether shared or disease-specific genetic mechanisms at MOBP converge on altered DNA methylation and expression across neurodegenerative disorders. We analysed MOBP variants using summary statistics from recent GWAS for ALS, PSP, FTD, LBD, PD, MSA, AD, and CJD. Colocalisation (COLOC and SuSiE-coloc) was used to test whether disease-associated variants overlapped between diseases, and with oligodendrocyte expression quantitative trait loci (eQTLs) and bulk brain methylation quantitative trait loci (mQTLs). To further investigate mQTL effects at this locus, rs1768208, a variant previously associated with PSP, was genotyped in an overlapping brain methylation cohort, allowing direct testing of genotype-methylation associations in frontal white matter tissue. ALS and PSP GWAS demonstrated strong association at MOBP, with most strongly associated SNPs (e.g. rs631312, rs616147, rs1768208) shared between both disorders. Colocalisation analyses indicated high posterior probability that ALS and PSP share the same causal variant, with weaker overlap with FTD. mQTL colocalisation highlighted cg15069948, located near an exon junction within MOBP, as strongly colocalising with the ALS/PSP risk variants. In complementary tissue analyses, rs1768208-T carriers showed hypomethylation at cg15069948 in PSP brains. No genotype-methylation effects were detected in MSA or Parkinson's disease. Together with prior evidence of promoter hypermethylation and reduced expression in MSA, our findings identify cg15069948 as a regulatory methylation site linking ALS/PSP risk variants to altered MOBP methylation, and support MOBP dysregulation as a shared feature of neurodegeneration. However, the underlying mechanisms appear disease-specific, highlighting the complexity of involvement of this gene across neurodegenerative disorders.

Score Breakdown

AI Score
30.0
Base Score
27.9
Rank Score
26.7
Narrative Velocity
-
AI Confidence
-
Neurocompute Parkinson’s Narrative Velocity Infographic
NEUROCOMPUTE VISUAL SYSTEM

Open the Narrative Velocity Map

Explore the full Parkinson’s research intelligence diagram.

Expand Intelligence View →
Full Neurocompute Infographic
Full Neurocompute Infographic