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Cross-disorder genome-wide analyses suggest a complex genetic relationship between Tourette's syndrome and OCD.

Authors :
Yu D
Mathews CA
Scharf JM
Neale BM
Davis LK
Gamazon ER
Derks EM
Evans P
Edlund CK
Crane J
Fagerness JA
Osiecki L
Gallagher P
Gerber G
Haddad S
Illmann C
McGrath LM
Mayerfeld C
Arepalli S
Barlassina C
Barr CL
Bellodi L
Benarroch F
Berrió GB
Bienvenu OJ
Black DW
Bloch MH
Brentani H
Bruun RD
Budman CL
Camarena B
Campbell DD
Cappi C
Silgado JC
Cavallini MC
Chavira DA
Chouinard S
Cook EH
Cookson MR
Coric V
Cullen B
Cusi D
Delorme R
Denys D
Dion Y
Eapen V
Egberts K
Falkai P
Fernandez T
Fournier E
Garrido H
Geller D
Gilbert DL
Girard SL
Grabe HJ
Grados MA
Greenberg BD
Gross-Tsur V
Grünblatt E
Hardy J
Heiman GA
Hemmings SM
Herrera LD
Hezel DM
Hoekstra PJ
Jankovic J
Kennedy JL
King RA
Konkashbaev AI
Kremeyer B
Kurlan R
Lanzagorta N
Leboyer M
Leckman JF
Lennertz L
Liu C
Lochner C
Lowe TL
Lupoli S
Macciardi F
Maier W
Manunta P
Marconi M
McCracken JT
Mesa Restrepo SC
Moessner R
Moorjani P
Morgan J
Muller H
Murphy DL
Naarden AL
Nurmi E
Ochoa WC
Ophoff RA
Pakstis AJ
Pato MT
Pato CN
Piacentini J
Pittenger C
Pollak Y
Rauch SL
Renner T
Reus VI
Richter MA
Riddle MA
Robertson MM
Romero R
Rosário MC
Rosenberg D
Ruhrmann S
Sabatti C
Salvi E
Sampaio AS
Samuels J
Sandor P
Service SK
Sheppard B
Singer HS
Smit JH
Stein DJ
Strengman E
Tischfield JA
Turiel M
Valencia Duarte AV
Vallada H
Veenstra-VanderWeele J
Walitza S
Wang Y
Weale M
Weiss R
Wendland JR
Westenberg HG
Shugart YY
Hounie AG
Miguel EC
Nicolini H
Wagner M
Ruiz-Linares A
Cath DC
McMahon W
Posthuma D
Oostra BA
Nestadt G
Rouleau GA
Purcell S
Jenike MA
Heutink P
Hanna GL
Conti DV
Arnold PD
Freimer NB
Stewart SE
Knowles JA
Cox NJ
Pauls DL
Source :
The American journal of psychiatry [Am J Psychiatry] 2015 Jan; Vol. 172 (1), pp. 82-93. Date of Electronic Publication: 2014 Oct 31.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Objective: Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and Tourette's syndrome are highly heritable neurodevelopmental disorders that are thought to share genetic risk factors. However, the identification of definitive susceptibility genes for these etiologically complex disorders remains elusive. The authors report a combined genome-wide association study (GWAS) of Tourette's syndrome and OCD.<br />Method: The authors conducted a GWAS in 2,723 cases (1,310 with OCD, 834 with Tourette's syndrome, 579 with OCD plus Tourette's syndrome/chronic tics), 5,667 ancestry-matched controls, and 290 OCD parent-child trios. GWAS summary statistics were examined for enrichment of functional variants associated with gene expression levels in brain regions. Polygenic score analyses were conducted to investigate the genetic architecture within and across the two disorders.<br />Results: Although no individual single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) achieved genome-wide significance, the GWAS signals were enriched for SNPs strongly associated with variations in brain gene expression levels (expression quantitative loci, or eQTLs), suggesting the presence of true functional variants that contribute to risk of these disorders. Polygenic score analyses identified a significant polygenic component for OCD (p=2×10(-4)), predicting 3.2% of the phenotypic variance in an independent data set. In contrast, Tourette's syndrome had a smaller, nonsignificant polygenic component, predicting only 0.6% of the phenotypic variance (p=0.06). No significant polygenic signal was detected across the two disorders, although the sample is likely underpowered to detect a modest shared signal. Furthermore, the OCD polygenic signal was significantly attenuated when cases with both OCD and co-occurring Tourette's syndrome/chronic tics were included in the analysis (p=0.01).<br />Conclusions: Previous work has shown that Tourette's syndrome and OCD have some degree of shared genetic variation. However, the data from this study suggest that there are also distinct components to the genetic architectures of these two disorders. Furthermore, OCD with co-occurring Tourette's syndrome/chronic tics may have different underlying genetic susceptibility compared with OCD alone.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1535-7228
Volume :
172
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The American journal of psychiatry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
25158072
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1176/appi.ajp.2014.13101306