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1.
JAMA Netw Open ; 7(2): e240376, 2024 Feb 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38407905

RESUMO

Importance: The use of tobacco products, including e-cigarettes and vaping, has rapidly increased among children. However, despite consistent associations found between smoking cigarettes and suicidal behaviors among adolescents and adults, there are limited data on associations between emerging tobacco products and suicidal behaviors, especially among preadolescent children. Objective: To examine whether the use of tobacco products is associated with nonsuicidal self-injury (NSSI), suicidal ideation (SI), and suicide attempts (SAs) among preadolescent children. Design, Setting, and Participants: This cohort study, conducted from September 1, 2022, to September 5, 2023, included participants in the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development study, a population-based cohort of 11 868 US children enrolled at 9 and 10 years of age. The cross-sectional investigation focused on 3-year periods starting from the baseline to year 2 of follow-up. Statistical analysis was performed from October 1, 2022, to June 30, 2023. Main Outcomes and Measures: Children's use of tobacco products was assessed based on youth reports, including lifetime experiences of various nicotine-related products, supplemented with hair toxicologic tests. Main outcomes were children's lifetime experiences of NSSI, SI, and SAs, assessed using the K-SADS-5 (Kiddie Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia for the DSM-5). Multivariate logistic regression was conducted to examine the associations of the use of tobacco products with NSSI, SI, and SAs among the study participants. Sociodemographic, familial, and children's behavioral, temperamental, and clinical outcomes were adjusted in the analyses. Results: Of 8988 unrelated study participants (median age, 9.8 years [range, 8.9-11.0 years]; 4301 girls [47.9%]), 101 children (1.1%) and 151 children (1.7%) acknowledged lifetime use of tobacco products at baseline and at 18-month follow-up, respectively. After accounting for various suicide risk factors and potential confounders, children reporting use of tobacco products were at a 3 to 5 times increased risk of SAs (baseline: n = 153 [adjusted odds ratio (OR), 4.67; 95% CI, 2.35-9.28; false discovery rate (FDR)-corrected P < .001]; year 1: n = 227 [adjusted OR, 4.25; 95% CI, 2.33-7.74; FDR-corrected P < .001]; and year 2: n = 321 [adjusted OR, 2.85; 95% CI, 1.58-5.13; FDR-corrected P = .001]). Of all facets of impulsivity measures that were significant correlates of use of tobacco products, negative urgency was the only independent risk factor for SAs (adjusted OR, 1.52 [95% CI, 1.31-1.78]; FDR-corrected P < .001). In contrast, children's alcohol, cannabis, and prescription drug use were not associated with SAs. Conclusions and Relevance: This study of US children suggests that the increased risk of SAs, consistently reported for adolescents and adults who smoke cigarettes, extends to a range of emerging tobacco products and manifests among elementary school-aged children. Further investigations are imperative to clarify the underlying mechanisms and to implement effective preventive policies for children.


Assuntos
Sistemas Eletrônicos de Liberação de Nicotina , Produtos do Tabaco , Adolescente , Adulto , Criança , Feminino , Humanos , Tentativa de Suicídio , Estudos de Coortes , Estudos Transversais , Nicotina
2.
Biol Psychiatry Glob Open Sci ; 3(4): 875-883, 2023 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37881582

RESUMO

Background: Physical activity is associated with mental health benefits in youth. Here, we used causal inference and triangulation with 2 levels of biology to substantiate relationships between sports participation and dimensional psychopathology in youths. Methods: Baseline data from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study, which recruited children from 9 to 10 years of age across the United States, were included in multilevel regression models to assess relationships between lifetime participation in team sports (TS), individual sports, and nonsports activities and Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) scores. We calculated polygenic risk scores for 8 psychiatric disorders to assess interactions with sports exposure on CBCL scores among European descendants. Following rigorous quality control, FreeSurfer-extracted brain magnetic resonance imaging structural data were examined for mediation of CBCL-activities relationships. Results: Among those with complete data (N = 10,411), causal estimates using inverse probability weighting associated lifetime TS exposure with a 1.05-point reduction in CBCL total (95% CI, -1.54 to -0.56, p < .0001) a relationship that was specific to TS and strengthened with more years of exposure. Associations of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder polygenic loading with CBCL total weakened in European children with TS exposure (n = 4041; beta = -0.93, SE = 0.38, p = .013). Furthermore, TS participation and lower CBCL each associated with increased subcortical volumes (n = 8197). Subcortical volume mediated 5.5% of TS effects on CBCL total. Conclusions: Our findings support prior associations of TS participation with lower psychopathology in youths through additional studies that demonstrate specificity, dose response, and coherence across 2 levels of biology. Longitudinal studies that further clarify causal relationships may justify interventional studies of TS for high-risk youth.

3.
Nat Neurosci ; 26(6): 959-969, 2023 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37202553

RESUMO

Childhood psychiatric symptoms are often diffuse but can coalesce into discrete mental illnesses during late adolescence. We leveraged polygenic scores (PGSs) to parse genomic risk for childhood symptoms and to uncover related neurodevelopmental mechanisms with transcriptomic and neuroimaging data. In independent samples (Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development, Generation R) a narrow cross-disorder neurodevelopmental PGS, reflecting risk for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, autism, depression and Tourette syndrome, predicted psychiatric symptoms through early adolescence with greater sensitivity than broad cross-disorder PGSs reflecting shared risk across eight psychiatric disorders, the disorder-specific PGS individually or two other narrow cross-disorder (Compulsive, Mood-Psychotic) scores. Neurodevelopmental PGS-associated genes were preferentially expressed in the cerebellum, where their expression peaked prenatally. Further, lower gray matter volumes in cerebellum and functionally coupled cortical regions associated with psychiatric symptoms in mid-childhood. These findings demonstrate that the genetic underpinnings of pediatric psychiatric symptoms differ from those of adult illness, and implicate fetal cerebellar developmental processes that endure through childhood.


Assuntos
Transtorno do Deficit de Atenção com Hiperatividade , Cognição , Adolescente , Humanos , Adulto , Criança , Transtorno do Deficit de Atenção com Hiperatividade/genética , Encéfalo/patologia , Cerebelo/diagnóstico por imagem , Substância Cinzenta
4.
J Biomed Inform ; 137: 104243, 2023 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36403757

RESUMO

OBJECTIVES: We propose a communication-efficient transfer learning approach (COMMUTE) that effectively incorporates multi-site healthcare data for training a risk prediction model in a target population of interest, accounting for challenges including population heterogeneity and data sharing constraints across sites. METHODS: We first train population-specific source models locally within each site. Using data from a given target population, COMMUTE learns a calibration term for each source model, which adjusts for potential data heterogeneity through flexible distance-based regularizations. In a centralized setting where multi-site data can be directly pooled, all data are combined to train the target model after calibration. When individual-level data are not shareable in some sites, COMMUTE requests only the locally trained models from these sites, with which, COMMUTE generates heterogeneity-adjusted synthetic data for training the target model. We evaluate COMMUTE via extensive simulation studies and an application to multi-site data from the electronic Medical Records and Genomics (eMERGE) Network to predict extreme obesity. RESULTS: Simulation studies show that COMMUTE outperforms methods without adjusting for population heterogeneity and methods trained in a single population over a broad spectrum of settings. Using eMERGE data, COMMUTE achieves an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) around 0.80, which outperforms other benchmark methods with AUC ranging from 0.51 to 0.70. CONCLUSION: COMMUTE improves the risk prediction in a target population with limited samples and safeguards against negative transfer when some source populations are highly different from the target. In a federated setting, it is highly communication efficient as it only requires each site to share model parameter estimates once, and no iterative communication or higher-order terms are needed.


Assuntos
Genômica , Aprendizado de Máquina , Simulação por Computador , Registros Eletrônicos de Saúde , Comunicação
5.
JAMA Psychiatry ; 79(10): 971-980, 2022 10 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36044238

RESUMO

Importance: Suicide rates have been increasing among youth in the US. While the heritability of suicide risk is well established, there is limited understanding of how genetic risk is associated with suicidal thoughts and behaviors in young children. Objective: To examine whether genetic susceptibility to suicide attempts (SAs) is associated with suicidal thoughts and behaviors in children. Design, Setting, and Participants: This case-control study examined data from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study, a population-based longitudinal study of 11 878 US children enrolled at age 9 and 10 years from September 2016 to November 2018. Youth reports of suicidal ideation (SI) and SAs were obtained from the Kiddie Schedule for Affective Disorder and Schizophrenia at baseline and 2 subsequent years. After conservative quality control of genotype data, this analysis focused on 4344 unrelated individuals of European ancestry. Data analysis was conducted from November 2020 to February 2022. Main Outcomes and Measures: Children's lifetime experiences of SI and SAs were assessed each year from ages 9 to 10 years to ages 11 to 12 years. Polygenic risk scores (PRSs) for SAs were calculated for ABCD study participants based on the largest genome-wide association study of SA cases and controls of European ancestry (total sample n = 518 612). Results: Of 4344 children of European ancestry (2045 [47.08%] female; mean [SD] age, 9.93 [0.62] years), significant associations were found between children's SA PRSs and their lifetime SAs with the most robust association in the follow-up year 2 (odds ratio, 1.43 [95% CI, 1.18-1.75]; corrected P = 1.85 × 10-3; Nagelkerke pseudo R2 = 1.51%). These associations remained significant after accounting for children's sociodemographic backgrounds, psychopathology symptoms, parental histories of suicide and mental health, and PRSs for major depression and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (likelihood ratio test P < .05). Children's depressive mood and aggressive behavior were the most significant partial mediators of SA genetic risk on SAs (mediation analysis P < 1 × 10-16). Children's behavioral problems, such as attention problems, rule-breaking behavior, and social problems, also partially mediated the association of SA PRSs with SAs (mediation analysis false discover rate < 0.05). Conclusions and Relevance: This study's findings indicate that there may be genetic factors associated with SA risk across the life span and suggest behaviors and conditions through which the risk could be mediated in childhood. Further research is warranted to examine whether incorporating genetic data could improve the identification of children at risk for suicide.


Assuntos
Ideação Suicida , Tentativa de Suicídio , Adolescente , Adulto , Estudos de Casos e Controles , Criança , Pré-Escolar , Feminino , Estudo de Associação Genômica Ampla , Humanos , Estudos Longitudinais , Masculino , Fatores de Risco , Tentativa de Suicídio/psicologia
6.
Nat Genet ; 54(5): 548-559, 2022 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35513722

RESUMO

We interrogate the joint genetic architecture of 11 major psychiatric disorders at biobehavioral, functional genomic and molecular genetic levels of analysis. We identify four broad factors (neurodevelopmental, compulsive, psychotic and internalizing) that underlie genetic correlations among the disorders and test whether these factors adequately explain their genetic correlations with biobehavioral traits. We introduce stratified genomic structural equation modeling, which we use to identify gene sets that disproportionately contribute to genetic risk sharing. This includes protein-truncating variant-intolerant genes expressed in excitatory and GABAergic brain cells that are enriched for genetic overlap across disorders with psychotic features. Multivariate association analyses detect 152 (20 new) independent loci that act on the individual factors and identify nine loci that act heterogeneously across disorders within a factor. Despite moderate-to-high genetic correlations across all 11 disorders, we find little utility of a single dimension of genetic risk across psychiatric disorders either at the level of biobehavioral correlates or at the level of individual variants.


Assuntos
Estudo de Associação Genômica Ampla , Transtornos Mentais , Predisposição Genética para Doença , Genoma , Genômica , Humanos , Transtornos Mentais/genética , Biologia Molecular , Polimorfismo de Nucleotídeo Único/genética
7.
Biol Psychiatry ; 92(3): 236-245, 2022 08 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35216811

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Suicide is among the leading causes of death in children and adolescents. There are well-known risk factors of suicide, including childhood abuse, family conflicts, social adversity, and psychopathology. While suicide risk is also known to be heritable, few studies have investigated genetic risk in younger individuals. METHODS: Using polygenic risk score analysis, we examined whether genetic susceptibility to major psychiatric disorders is associated with suicidal behaviors among 11,878 children enrolled in the ABCD (Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development) Study. Suicidal ideation and suicide attempt data were assessed using the youth report of the Kiddie Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia for DSM-5. After performing robust quality control of genotype data, unrelated individuals of European descent were included in analyses (n = 4344). RESULTS: Among 8 psychiatric disorders we examined, depression polygenic risk scores were associated with lifetime suicide attempts both in the baseline (odds ratio = 1.55, 95% CI = 1.10-2.18, p = 1.27 × 10-2) and in the follow-up year (odds ratio = 1.38, 95% CI = 1.08-1.77, p = 1.05 × 10-2), after adjusting for children's age, sex, socioeconomic backgrounds, family history of suicide, and psychopathology. In contrast, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder polygenic risk scores were associated with lifetime suicidal ideation (odds ratio = 1.15, 95% CI = 1.05-1.26, p = 3.71 × 10-3), suggesting a distinct contribution of the genetic risk underlying attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and depression on suicidal behaviors of children. CONCLUSIONS: The largest genetic sample of suicide risk data in U.S. children suggests a significant genetic basis of suicide risk related to attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and depression. Further research is warranted to examine whether incorporation of genomic risk may facilitate more targeted screening and intervention efforts.


Assuntos
Transtorno do Deficit de Atenção com Hiperatividade , Transtorno Depressivo Maior , Adolescente , Transtorno do Deficit de Atenção com Hiperatividade/diagnóstico , Transtorno do Deficit de Atenção com Hiperatividade/epidemiologia , Transtorno do Deficit de Atenção com Hiperatividade/genética , Encéfalo , Criança , Cognição , Depressão/psicologia , Transtorno Depressivo Maior/epidemiologia , Transtorno Depressivo Maior/genética , Humanos , Fatores de Risco , Ideação Suicida
8.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34637873

RESUMO

Psychiatric disorders affect 29% of the global population at least once in the lifespan, and genetic studies have proved a shared genetic basis among them, although the underlying molecular mechanisms remain largely unknown. DNA methylation plays an important role in complex disorders and, remarkably, enrichment of common genetic variants influencing allele-specific methylation (ASM) has been reported among variants associated with specific psychiatric disorders. In the present study we assessed the contribution of ASM to a set of eight psychiatric disorders by combining genetic, epigenetic and expression data. We interrogated a list of 3896 ASM tagSNPs in the brain in the summary statistics of a cross-disorder GWAS meta-analysis of eight psychiatric disorders from the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium, including more than 162,000 cases and 276,000 controls. We identified 80 SNPs with pleiotropic effects on psychiatric disorders that show an opposite directional effect on methylation and gene expression. These SNPs converge on eight candidate genes: ZSCAN29, ZSCAN31, BTN3A2, DDAH2, HAPLN4, ARTN, FAM109B and NAGA. ZSCAN29 shows the broadest pleiotropic effects, showing associations with five out of eight psychiatric disorders considered, followed by ZSCAN31 and BTN3A2, associated with three disorders. All these genes overlap with CNVs related to cognitive phenotypes and psychiatric traits, they are expressed in the brain, and seven of them have previously been associated with specific psychiatric disorders, supporting our results. To sum up, our integrative functional genomics analysis identified eight psychiatric disease risk genes that impact a broad list of disorders and highlight an etiologic role of SNPs that influence DNA methylation and gene expression in the brain.


Assuntos
Metilação de DNA , Epigenômica , Pleiotropia Genética , Transtornos Mentais/genética , Encéfalo , Expressão Gênica , Humanos , Fenótipo , Polimorfismo de Nucleotídeo Único
9.
Front Genet ; 12: 687687, 2021.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34603368

RESUMO

Osteoarthritis (OA) and major depression (MD) are two debilitating disorders that frequently co-occur and affect millions of the elderly each year. Despite the greater symptom severity, poorer clinical outcomes, and increased mortality of the comorbid conditions, we have a limited understanding of their etiologic relationships. In this study, we conducted the first cross-disorder investigations of OA and MD, using genome-wide association data representing over 247K cases and 475K controls. Along with significant positive genome-wide genetic correlations (r g = 0.299 ± 0.026, p = 9.10 × 10-31), Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis identified a bidirectional causal effect between OA and MD (ßOA → MD = 0.09, SE = 0.02, z-score p-value < 1.02 × 10-5; ßMD → OA = 0.19, SE = 0.026, p < 2.67 × 10-13), indicating genetic variants affecting OA risk are, in part, shared with those influencing MD risk. Cross-disorder meta-analysis of OA and MD identified 56 genomic risk loci (P meta ≤ 5 × 10-8), which show heightened expression of the associated genes in the brain and pituitary. Gene-set enrichment analysis highlighted "mechanosensory behavior" genes (GO:0007638; P gene_set = 2.45 × 10-8) as potential biological mechanisms that simultaneously increase susceptibility to these mental and physical health conditions. Taken together, these findings show that OA and MD share common genetic risk mechanisms, one of which centers on the neural response to the sensation of mechanical stimulus. Further investigation is warranted to elaborate the etiologic mechanisms of the pleiotropic risk genes, as well as to develop early intervention and integrative clinical care of these serious conditions that disproportionally affect the aging population.

10.
J Genet ; 1002021.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34282735

RESUMO

Dysregulated histone methylation has emerged as a recurring theme in multiple neuropsychiatric disorders. However, it is yet unclear whether the altered histone methylation is associated with aetiologic mechanisms or an outcome of disease manifestation. In this study, we examined the genomewide association studies datasets of three major psychiatric disorders, schizophrenia (SCZ), bipolar disorder (BIP), and major depression disorder (MDD), which represents a total of 231,783 cases and 425,444 controls, to clarify the relationship. Our gene-set enrichment analysis results identified statistically significant association of genes involved in three histone methylation biological processes with the three adult-onset psychiatric disorders, which is mainly driven by the histone H3K4 methylation pathway (GO: 0051568). Further analysis of histone H3K4 methylation pathway genes revealed a widespread role of the genes in brain function and disease; 29 (52%) and 41 genes (73.2%) were associated with at least one brain-related trait or brain disorder, respectively. Spatiotemporal gene expression analysis suggests that these pathway genes play a critical role during the prenatal period and are consistent regulators in the cerebral cortex throughout an individual's life. AUTS2, DNMT1 and TET2 are genes of particular interest due to their pervasive role in various aspects of brain function. Our findings support a critical aetiologic role of H3K4 methylation genes shared across SCZ, BIP and MDD, providing new direction for the development of epigenetically-focussed drugs targeting common causal factors of these devastating disorders.


Assuntos
Transtorno Bipolar/genética , Transtorno Depressivo Maior/genética , Histonas/genética , Esquizofrenia/genética , Transtorno Bipolar/patologia , Encéfalo/metabolismo , Encéfalo/patologia , Transtorno Depressivo Maior/patologia , Estudo de Associação Genômica Ampla , Humanos , Metilação , Oxirredutases N-Desmetilantes/genética , Processamento de Proteína Pós-Traducional/genética , Esquizofrenia/patologia
11.
J Genet Genomics ; 48(3): 173-183, 2021 03 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33896739

RESUMO

Pathway analysis, also known as gene-set enrichment analysis, is a multilocus analytic strategy that integrates a priori, biological knowledge into the statistical analysis of high-throughput genetics data. Originally developed for the studies of gene expression data, it has become a powerful analytic procedure for in-depth mining of genome-wide genetic variation data. Astonishing discoveries were made in the past years, uncovering genes and biological mechanisms underlying common and complex disorders. However, as massive amounts of diverse functional genomics data accrue, there is a pressing need for newer generations of pathway analysis methods that can utilize multiple layers of high-throughput genomics data. In this review, we provide an intellectual foundation of this powerful analytic strategy, as well as an update of the state-of-the-art in recent method developments. The goal of this review is threefold: (1) introduce the motivation and basic steps of pathway analysis for genome-wide genetic variation data; (2) review the merits and the shortcomings of classic and newly emerging integrative pathway analysis tools; and (3) discuss remaining challenges and future directions for further method developments.


Assuntos
Predisposição Genética para Doença , Estudo de Associação Genômica Ampla , Algoritmos , Humanos
12.
Biol Psychiatry ; 90(5): 317-327, 2021 09 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33714545

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Tourette syndrome (TS) is often found comorbid with other neurodevelopmental disorders across the impulsivity-compulsivity spectrum, with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), autism spectrum disorder (ASD), and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) as most prevalent. This points to the possibility of a common etiological thread along an impulsivity-compulsivity continuum. METHODS: Investigating the shared genetic basis across TS, ADHD, ASD, and OCD, we undertook an evaluation of cross-disorder genetic architecture and systematic meta-analysis, integrating summary statistics from the latest genome-wide association studies (93,294 individuals, 6,788,510 markers). RESULTS: As previously identified, a common unifying factor connects TS, ADHD, and ASD, while TS and OCD show the highest genetic correlation in pairwise testing among these disorders. Thanks to a more homogeneous set of disorders and a targeted approach that is guided by genetic correlations, we were able to identify multiple novel hits and regions that seem to play a pleiotropic role for the specific disorders analyzed here and could not be identified through previous studies. In the TS-ADHD-ASD genome-wide association study single nucleotide polymorphism-based and gene-based meta-analysis, we uncovered 13 genome-wide significant regions that host single nucleotide polymorphisms with a high posterior probability for association with all three studied disorders (m-value > 0.9), 11 of which were not identified in previous cross-disorder analysis. In contrast, we also identified two additional pleiotropic regions in the TS-OCD meta-analysis. Through conditional analysis, we highlighted genes and genetic regions that play a specific role in a TS-ADHD-ASD genetic factor versus TS-OCD. Cross-disorder tissue specificity analysis implicated the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal gland axis in TS-ADHD-ASD. CONCLUSIONS: Our work underlines the value of redefining the framework for research across traditional diagnostic categories.


Assuntos
Transtorno do Deficit de Atenção com Hiperatividade , Transtorno do Espectro Autista , Transtorno Obsessivo-Compulsivo , Síndrome de Tourette , Transtorno do Deficit de Atenção com Hiperatividade/epidemiologia , Transtorno do Deficit de Atenção com Hiperatividade/genética , Transtorno do Espectro Autista/genética , Comorbidade , Estudo de Associação Genômica Ampla , Humanos , Comportamento Impulsivo , Transtorno Obsessivo-Compulsivo/epidemiologia , Transtorno Obsessivo-Compulsivo/genética , Síndrome de Tourette/epidemiologia , Síndrome de Tourette/genética
13.
Biol Psychiatry ; 89(12): 1127-1137, 2021 06 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33648717

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: The origin of sex differences in prevalence and presentation of neuropsychiatric and behavioral traits is largely unknown. Given established genetic contributions and correlations, we tested for a sex-differentiated genetic architecture within and between traits. METHODS: Using European ancestry genome-wide association summary statistics for 20 neuropsychiatric and behavioral traits, we tested for sex differences in single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP)-based heritability and genetic correlation (rg < 1). For each trait, we computed per-SNP z scores from sex-stratified regression coefficients and identified genes with sex-differentiated effects using a gene-based approach. We calculated correlation coefficients between z scores to test for shared sex-differentiated effects. Finally, we tested for sex differences in across-trait genetic correlations. RESULTS: We observed no consistent sex differences in SNP-based heritability. Between-sex, within-trait genetic correlations were high, although <1 for educational attainment and risk-taking behavior. We identified 4 genes with significant sex-differentiated effects across 3 traits. Several trait pairs shared sex-differentiated effects. The top genes with sex-differentiated effects were enriched for multiple gene sets, including neuron- and synapse-related sets. Most between-trait genetic correlation estimates were not significantly different between sexes, with exceptions (educational attainment and risk-taking behavior). CONCLUSIONS: Sex differences in the common autosomal genetic architecture of neuropsychiatric and behavioral phenotypes are small and polygenic and unlikely to fully account for observed sex-differentiated attributes. Larger sample sizes are needed to identify sex-differentiated effects for most traits. For well-powered studies, we identified genes with sex-differentiated effects that were enriched for neuron-related and other biological functions. This work motivates further investigation of genetic and environmental influences on sex differences.


Assuntos
Estudo de Associação Genômica Ampla , Herança Multifatorial , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Fenótipo , Polimorfismo de Nucleotídeo Único , Caracteres Sexuais
14.
Biol Psychiatry ; 89(1): 20-31, 2021 01 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33131714

RESUMO

Genome-wide analyses of common and rare genetic variations have documented the heritability of major psychiatric disorders, established their highly polygenic genetic architecture, and identified hundreds of contributing variants. In recent years, these studies have illuminated another key feature of the genetic basis of psychiatric disorders: the important role and pervasive nature of pleiotropy. It is now clear that a substantial fraction of genetic influences on psychopathology transcend clinical diagnostic boundaries. In this review, we summarize evidence in psychiatry for pleiotropy at multiple levels of analysis: from overall genome-wide correlation to biological pathways and down to the level of individual loci. We examine underlying mechanisms of observed pleiotropy, including genetic effects on neurodevelopment, diverse actions of regulatory elements, mediated effects, and spurious associations of genomic variation with multiple phenotypes. We conclude with an exploration of the implications of pleiotropy for understanding the genetic basis of psychiatric disorders, informing nosology, and advancing the aims of precision psychiatry and genomic medicine.


Assuntos
Estudo de Associação Genômica Ampla , Transtornos Mentais , Predisposição Genética para Doença , Genômica , Humanos , Transtornos Mentais/genética , Herança Multifatorial , Fenótipo
15.
Biol Psychiatry ; 86(2): 110-119, 2019 07 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30686506

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Genetic risk for bipolar disorder (BD) is conferred through many common alleles, while a role for rare copy number variants (CNVs) is less clear. Subtypes of BD including schizoaffective disorder bipolar type (SAB), bipolar I disorder (BD I), and bipolar II disorder (BD II) differ according to the prominence and timing of psychosis, mania, and depression. The genetic factors contributing to the combination of symptoms among these subtypes are poorly understood. METHODS: Rare large CNVs were analyzed in 6353 BD cases (3833 BD I [2676 with psychosis, 850 without psychosis, and 307 with unknown psychosis history], 1436 BD II, 579 SAB, and 505 BD not otherwise specified) and 8656 controls. CNV burden and a polygenic risk score (PRS) for schizophrenia were used to evaluate the relative contributions of rare and common variants to risk of BD, BD subtypes, and psychosis. RESULTS: CNV burden did not differ between BD and controls when treated as a single diagnostic entity. However, burden in SAB was increased relative to controls (p = .001), BD I (p = .0003), and BD II (p = .0007). Burden and schizophrenia PRSs were increased in SAB compared with BD I with psychosis (CNV p = .0007, PRS p = .004), and BD I without psychosis (CNV p = .0004, PRS p = 3.9 × 10-5). Within BD I, psychosis was associated with increased schizophrenia PRSs (p = .005) but not CNV burden. CONCLUSIONS: CNV burden in BD is limited to SAB. Rare and common genetic variants may contribute differently to risk for psychosis and perhaps other classes of psychiatric symptoms.


Assuntos
Transtorno Bipolar/genética , Variações do Número de Cópias de DNA/genética , Transtornos Psicóticos/genética , Transtorno Bipolar/psicologia , Estudos de Casos e Controles , Estudos de Coortes , Duplicação Gênica/genética , Predisposição Genética para Doença , Estudo de Associação Genômica Ampla , Humanos , Herança Multifatorial , Transtornos Psicóticos/psicologia , Esquizofrenia/genética
16.
Nat Genet ; 50(12): 1753, 2018 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30390058

RESUMO

In the version of this article originally published, there were two errors in the text of the second paragraph of the Methods section. In the sentence "To identify genetic variants that contribute to doctor-diagnosed asthma and allergic diseases (detailed phenotype information described in the Supplementary Note) and link them with other conditions, we performed GWASs using phenotype measures in UK Biobank participants (N = 487,409)" the number of participants should have been 150,509. In the sentence "Thus, a total of 110,361 European descendants with high-quality genotyping and complete phenotype/covariate data were used for these analyses, including 25,685 allergic diseases subjects (hay fever/allergic rhinitis or eczema, without doctor-diagnosed asthma), 14,085 asthma subjects and 76,768 controls for the analysis" the phrase "without doctor-diagnosed asthma" should have read "some with doctor-diagnosed asthma." The errors have been corrected in the HTML and PDF versions of the article.

17.
Science ; 360(6395)2018 06 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29930110

RESUMO

Disorders of the brain can exhibit considerable epidemiological comorbidity and often share symptoms, provoking debate about their etiologic overlap. We quantified the genetic sharing of 25 brain disorders from genome-wide association studies of 265,218 patients and 784,643 control participants and assessed their relationship to 17 phenotypes from 1,191,588 individuals. Psychiatric disorders share common variant risk, whereas neurological disorders appear more distinct from one another and from the psychiatric disorders. We also identified significant sharing between disorders and a number of brain phenotypes, including cognitive measures. Further, we conducted simulations to explore how statistical power, diagnostic misclassification, and phenotypic heterogeneity affect genetic correlations. These results highlight the importance of common genetic variation as a risk factor for brain disorders and the value of heritability-based methods in understanding their etiology.


Assuntos
Encefalopatias/genética , Transtornos Mentais/genética , Encefalopatias/classificação , Encefalopatias/diagnóstico , Variação Genética , Estudo de Associação Genômica Ampla , Humanos , Transtornos Mentais/classificação , Transtornos Mentais/diagnóstico , Fenótipo , Característica Quantitativa Herdável , Fatores de Risco
18.
Nat Genet ; 50(6): 857-864, 2018 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29785011

RESUMO

Clinical and epidemiological data suggest that asthma and allergic diseases are associated and may share a common genetic etiology. We analyzed genome-wide SNP data for asthma and allergic diseases in 33,593 cases and 76,768 controls of European ancestry from UK Biobank. Two publicly available independent genome-wide association studies were used for replication. We have found a strong genome-wide genetic correlation between asthma and allergic diseases (rg = 0.75, P = 6.84 × 10-62). Cross-trait analysis identified 38 genome-wide significant loci, including 7 novel shared loci. Computational analysis showed that shared genetic loci are enriched in immune/inflammatory systems and tissues with epithelium cells. Our work identifies common genetic architectures shared between asthma and allergy and will help to advance understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying co-morbid asthma and allergic diseases.


Assuntos
Asma/genética , Hipersensibilidade/genética , Adulto , Idoso , Bancos de Espécimes Biológicos , Estudos de Casos e Controles , Feminino , Loci Gênicos , Predisposição Genética para Doença , Estudo de Associação Genômica Ampla/métodos , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Polimorfismo de Nucleotídeo Único , Reino Unido
19.
Transl Psychiatry ; 8(1): 86, 2018 04 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29666432

RESUMO

Bipolar disorder (BD) is a heritable mood disorder characterized by episodes of mania and depression. Although genomewide association studies (GWAS) have successfully identified genetic loci contributing to BD risk, sample size has become a rate-limiting obstacle to genetic discovery. Electronic health records (EHRs) represent a vast but relatively untapped resource for high-throughput phenotyping. As part of the International Cohort Collection for Bipolar Disorder (ICCBD), we previously validated automated EHR-based phenotyping algorithms for BD against in-person diagnostic interviews (Castro et al. Am J Psychiatry 172:363-372, 2015). Here, we establish the genetic validity of these phenotypes by determining their genetic correlation with traditionally ascertained samples. Case and control algorithms were derived from structured and narrative text in the Partners Healthcare system comprising more than 4.6 million patients over 20 years. Genomewide genotype data for 3330 BD cases and 3952 controls of European ancestry were used to estimate SNP-based heritability (h2g) and genetic correlation (rg) between EHR-based phenotype definitions and traditionally ascertained BD cases in GWAS by the ICCBD and Psychiatric Genomics Consortium (PGC) using LD score regression. We evaluated BD cases identified using 4 EHR-based algorithms: an NLP-based algorithm (95-NLP) and three rule-based algorithms using codified EHR with decreasing levels of stringency-"coded-strict", "coded-broad", and "coded-broad based on a single clinical encounter" (coded-broad-SV). The analytic sample comprised 862 95-NLP, 1968 coded-strict, 2581 coded-broad, 408 coded-broad-SV BD cases, and 3 952 controls. The estimated h2g were 0.24 (p = 0.015), 0.09 (p = 0.064), 0.13 (p = 0.003), 0.00 (p = 0.591) for 95-NLP, coded-strict, coded-broad and coded-broad-SV BD, respectively. The h2g for all EHR-based cases combined except coded-broad-SV (excluded due to 0 h2g) was 0.12 (p = 0.004). These h2g were lower or similar to the h2g observed by the ICCBD + PGCBD (0.23, p = 3.17E-80, total N = 33,181). However, the rg between ICCBD + PGCBD and the EHR-based cases were high for 95-NLP (0.66, p = 3.69 × 10-5), coded-strict (1.00, p = 2.40 × 10-4), and coded-broad (0.74, p = 8.11 × 10-7). The rg between EHR-based BD definitions ranged from 0.90 to 0.98. These results provide the first genetic validation of automated EHR-based phenotyping for BD and suggest that this approach identifies cases that are highly genetically correlated with those ascertained through conventional methods. High throughput phenotyping using the large data resources available in EHRs represents a viable method for accelerating psychiatric genetic research.


Assuntos
Transtorno Bipolar/genética , Registros Eletrônicos de Saúde , Fenótipo , Algoritmos , Transtorno Bipolar/diagnóstico , Estudos de Coortes , Predisposição Genética para Doença , Humanos , Sistemas Computadorizados de Registros Médicos , Polimorfismo de Nucleotídeo Único , População Branca/genética
20.
PLoS One ; 13(3): e0193256, 2018.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29494641

RESUMO

Advances in recent genome wide association studies (GWAS) suggest that pleiotropic effects on human complex traits are widespread. A number of classic and recent meta-analysis methods have been used to identify genetic loci with pleiotropic effects, but the overall performance of these methods is not well understood. In this work, we use extensive simulations and case studies of GWAS datasets to investigate the power and type-I error rates of ten meta-analysis methods. We specifically focus on three conditions commonly encountered in the studies of multiple traits: (1) extensive heterogeneity of genetic effects; (2) characterization of trait-specific association; and (3) inflated correlation of GWAS due to overlapping samples. Although the statistical power is highly variable under distinct study conditions, we found the superior power of several methods under diverse heterogeneity. In particular, classic fixed-effects model showed surprisingly good performance when a variant is associated with more than a half of study traits. As the number of traits with null effects increases, ASSET performed the best along with competitive specificity and sensitivity. With opposite directional effects, CPASSOC featured the first-rate power. However, caution is advised when using CPASSOC for studying genetically correlated traits with overlapping samples. We conclude with a discussion of unresolved issues and directions for future research.


Assuntos
Estudo de Associação Genômica Ampla/métodos , Heterogeneidade Genética , Loci Gênicos , Pleiotropia Genética , Humanos , Metanálise como Assunto , Modelos Estatísticos , Fenótipo
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