Can genes cause dementia?
Around 1 in 4 people aged 55 years and over has a close birth relative with dementia. Find out what part genes play in dementia and how genetics can affect the risk of developing the condition.
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- Rare types of dementia caused by genetic changes
- Genetic testing for dementia
- Genetics of dementia – useful resources
Genetics of dementia
It is well known that children can take after their parents – for example, in the way they look. This is partly because many of the key characteristics of a person are passed down from parents to children in their genes.
What are genes?
Genes are made from a chemical called DNA. They contain information that is needed to make proteins, which the body is built from. Humans have over 20,000 different genes. Most often, a person has two copies of each gene – one inherited from each parent.
What is a gene variant?
The same gene can differ between individuals – these are known as ‘gene variants’. These can help to explain why people are different to each other – for instance, why one person has blue eyes and another person has brown eyes.
If a gene variant increases a person's risk of developing a disease, it is known as a 'risk variant' for that disease.
How can genes cause disease?
Genes often play a role in the development of diseases. This can happen in two main ways.
How can genes cause dementia?
Most often, dementia is caused by a complex disease in which genes are only one factor. When this happens, the dementia develops as a result of many different factors. In these cases, genes do not directly cause it to develop.
It is not possible to directly inherit dementia when it is caused by a complex disease.
Dementia caused by a complex disease
Nearly all cases of dementia are the result of a complex disease. In these cases, genes may increase the risk of developing dementia, but they don’t cause it directly.
In some rare cases, dementia is caused directly by a single-gene disease.
In these cases, the dementia can be inherited from parent to child.
Dementia caused by a single-gene disease
Of the four most common types of dementia, frontotemporal dementia (FTD) is most likely to be caused by a single-gene change.
Rare types of dementia caused by a single-gene change
There are some rarer types of dementia that are caused by a single-gene change. These types of dementia can be directly inherited from parent to child.
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Sometimes, a gene changes and this causes a disease. This is known as a single-gene disease because it is caused by a change in just one gene. Single-gene diseases are often serious, but they are rare.
It is possible to directly inherit a single-gene disease. This means that if a child inherits the same changed gene that a parent has, they are very likely – in some cases almost certain – to develop the same disease.
Complex diseases are less straightforward. They develop through the interaction between several different factors. These are known as ‘risk factors’ for that disease. They include:
It isn’t possible to inherit a complex disease in the same way as a single-gene disease. This is because complex diseases are caused by multiple factors acting together.
However, a person with a family history of a complex disease will often have an increased chance of developing it. This is because they are likely to share risk factors with other birth relatives. Despite this increased chance, the person still might never develop the disease.