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Analysis of genetic differences between psychiatric disorders: Exploring pathways and cell-types/tissues involved and ability to differentiate the disorders by polygenic scores

Authors :
Rao, Shitao
Yin, Liangying
Xiang, Yong
So, Hon-Cheong
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Although displaying genetic correlations, psychiatric disorders are clinically defined as categorical entities as they each have distinguishing clinical features and may involve different treatments. Identifying differential genetic variations between these disorders may reveal how the disorders differ biologically and help to guide more personalized treatment. Here we presented a comprehensive analysis to identify genetic markers differentially associated with various psychiatric disorders/traits based on GWAS summary statistics, covering 18 psychiatric traits/disorders and 26 comparisons. We also conducted comprehensive analysis to unravel the genes, pathways and SNP functional categories involved, and the cell types and tissues implicated. We also assessed how well one could distinguish between psychiatric disorders by polygenic risk scores (PRS). SNP-based heritabilities (h2SNP) were significantly larger than zero for most comparisons. Based on current GWAS data, PRS have mostly modest power to distinguish between psychiatric disorders. For example, we estimated that AUC for distinguishing schizophrenia from major depressive disorder (MDD), bipolar disorder (BPD) from MDD and schizophrenia from BPD were 0.694, 0.602 and 0.618 respectively, while the maximum AUC (based on h2SNP) were 0.763, 0.749 and 0.726 respectively. We also uncovered differences in each pair of studied traits in terms of their differences in genetic correlation with comorbid traits. For example, clinically-defined MDD appeared to more strongly genetically correlated with other psychiatric disorders and heart disease, when compared to non-clinically-defined depression in UK Biobank. Our findings highlight genetic differences between psychiatric disorders and the mechanisms involved. PRS may aid differential diagnosis of selected psychiatric disorders in the future with larger GWAS samples.

Subjects

Subjects :
Quantitative Biology - Genomics

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2003.07105
Document Type :
Working Paper