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De Novo Damaging DNA Coding Mutations Are Associated With Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder and Overlap With Tourette's Disorder and Autism

Authors :
Manmeet Virdee
Emily Olfson
Thomas V. Fernandez
Margaret A. Richter
Maria Conceição do Rosário
Gwyneth Zai
Zsanett Péter
Euripedes C. Miguel
Abha R. Gupta
Ellen J. Hoffman
James L. Kennedy
Sarah B. Abdallah
Roseli G. Shavitt
Carolina Cappi
Melody E. Oliphant
A. Jeremy Willsey
Catherine Sullivan
Source :
Biological psychiatry, vol 87, iss 12
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Background Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is a debilitating neuropsychiatric disorder with a genetic risk component, yet identification of high-confidence risk genes has been challenging. In recent years, risk gene discovery in other complex psychiatric disorders has been achieved by studying rare de novo (DN) coding variants. Methods We performed whole-exome sequencing in 222 OCD parent-child trios (184 trios after quality control), comparing DN variant frequencies with 777 previously sequenced unaffected trios. We estimated the contribution of DN mutations to OCD risk and the number of genes involved. Finally, we looked for gene enrichment in other datasets and canonical pathways. Results DN likely gene disrupting and predicted damaging missense variants are enriched in OCD probands (rate ratio, 1.52; p = .0005) and contribute to risk. We identified 2 high-confidence risk genes, each containing 2 DN damaging variants in unrelated probands: CHD8 and SCUBE1. We estimate that 34% of DN damaging variants in OCD contribute to risk and that DN damaging variants in approximately 335 genes contribute to risk in 22% of OCD cases. Furthermore, genes harboring DN damaging variants in OCD are enriched for those reported in neurodevelopmental disorders, particularly Tourette’s disorder and autism spectrum disorder. An exploratory network analysis reveals significant functional connectivity and enrichment in canonical pathways, biological processes, and disease networks. Conclusions Our findings show a pathway toward systematic gene discovery in OCD via identification of DN damaging variants. Sequencing larger cohorts of OCD parent-child trios will reveal more OCD risk genes and will provide needed insights into underlying disease biology.

Details

ISSN :
18732402
Volume :
87
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Biological psychiatry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6d9d6db83d31e9ea4b3e51febeab1ecc