Predicting causal genes from psychiatric genome-wide association studies using high-level etiological knowledge.
Mol Psychiatry
; 27(7): 3095-3106, 2022 07.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-35411039
Genome-wide association studies have discovered hundreds of genomic loci associated with psychiatric traits, but the causal genes underlying these associations are often unclear, a research gap that has hindered clinical translation. Here, we present a Psychiatric Omnilocus Prioritization Score (PsyOPS) derived from just three binary features encapsulating high-level assumptions about psychiatric disease etiology - namely, that causal psychiatric disease genes are likely to be mutationally constrained, be specifically expressed in the brain, and overlap with known neurodevelopmental disease genes. To our knowledge, PsyOPS is the first method specifically tailored to prioritizing causal genes at psychiatric GWAS loci. We show that, despite its extreme simplicity, PsyOPS achieves state-of-the-art performance at this task, comparable to a prior domain-agnostic approach relying on tens of thousands of features. Genes prioritized by PsyOPS are substantially more likely than other genes at the same loci to have convergent evidence of direct regulation by the GWAS variant according to both DNA looping assays and expression or splicing quantitative trait locus (QTL) maps. We provide examples of genes hundreds of kilobases away from the lead variant, like GABBR1 for schizophrenia, that are prioritized by all three of PsyOPS, DNA looping and QTLs. Our results underscore the power of incorporating high-level knowledge of trait etiology into causal gene prediction at GWAS loci, and comprise a resource for researchers interested in experimentally characterizing psychiatric gene candidates.
Full text:
1
Collection:
01-internacional
Database:
MEDLINE
Main subject:
Quantitative Trait Loci
/
Genome-Wide Association Study
Type of study:
Etiology_studies
/
Prognostic_studies
/
Risk_factors_studies
Limits:
Humans
Language:
En
Journal:
Mol Psychiatry
Journal subject:
BIOLOGIA MOLECULAR
/
PSIQUIATRIA
Year:
2022
Document type:
Article
Affiliation country:
Canada
Country of publication:
United kingdom