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Identification of novel genomic risk loci shared between common epilepsies and psychiatric disorders

Authors :
Naz Karadag
Alexey A Shadrin
Kevin S O’Connell
Guy F L Hindley
Zillur Rahman
Nadine Parker
Shahram Bahrami
Vera Fominykh
Weiqiu Cheng
Børge Holen
Silje Alvestad
Erik Taubøll
Nils Eiel Steen
Srdjan Djurovic
Anders M Dale
Oleksandr Frei
Ole A Andreassen
Olav B Smeland
Source :
Brain.
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2023.

Abstract

Psychiatric disorders and common epilepsies are heritable disorders with a high comorbidity and overlapping symptoms. However, the causative mechanisms underlying this relationship are poorly understood. Here we aimed to identify overlapping genetic loci between epilepsy and psychiatric disorders to gain a better understanding of their comorbidity and shared clinical features. We analysed genome-wide association study data for all epilepsies (n = 44 889), genetic generalized epilepsy (n = 33 446), focal epilepsy (n = 39 348), schizophrenia (n = 77 096), bipolar disorder (n = 406 405), depression (n = 500 199), attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (n = 53 293) and autism spectrum disorder (n = 46 350). First, we applied the MiXeR tool to estimate the total number of causal variants influencing the disorders. Next, we used the conjunctional false discovery rate statistical framework to improve power to discover shared genomic loci. Additionally, we assessed the validity of the findings in independent cohorts, and functionally characterized the identified loci. The epilepsy phenotypes were considerably less polygenic (1.0 K to 3.4 K causal variants) than the psychiatric disorders (5.6 K to 13.9 K causal variants), with focal epilepsy being the least polygenic (1.0 K variants), and depression having the highest polygenicity (13.9 K variants). We observed cross-trait genetic enrichment between genetic generalized epilepsy and all psychiatric disorders and between all epilepsies and schizophrenia and depression. Using conjunctional false discovery rate analysis, we identified 40 distinct loci jointly associated with epilepsies and psychiatric disorders at conjunctional false discovery rate The extensive genetic overlap with mixed effect directions between psychiatric disorders and common epilepsies demonstrates a complex genetic relationship between these disorders, in line with their bi-directional relationship, and indicates that overlapping genetic risk may contribute to shared pathophysiological and clinical features between epilepsy and psychiatric disorders.

Subjects

Subjects :
Neurology (clinical)

Details

ISSN :
14602156 and 00068950
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Brain
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........fdb698b315074579a8944699a8819e95
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awad038