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Genome-Wide Association Study of Suicide Death and Polygenic Prediction of Clinical Antecedents.

Authors :
Docherty AR
Shabalin AA
DiBlasi E
Monson E
Mullins N
Adkins DE
Bacanu SA
Bakian AV
Crowell S
Chen D
Darlington TM
Callor WB
Christensen ED
Gray D
Keeshin B
Klein M
Anderson JS
Jerominski L
Hayward C
Porteous DJ
McIntosh A
Li Q
Coon H
Source :
The American journal of psychiatry [Am J Psychiatry] 2020 Oct 01; Vol. 177 (10), pp. 917-927.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Objective: Death by suicide is a highly preventable yet growing worldwide health crisis. To date, there has been a lack of adequately powered genomic studies of suicide, with no sizable suicide death cohorts available for analysis. To address this limitation, the authors conducted the first comprehensive genomic analysis of suicide death using previously unpublished genotype data from a large population-ascertained cohort.<br />Methods: The analysis sample comprised 3,413 population-ascertained case subjects of European ancestry and 14,810 ancestrally matched control subjects. Analytical methods included principal component analysis for ancestral matching and adjusting for population stratification, linear mixed model genome-wide association testing (conditional on genetic-relatedness matrix), gene and gene set-enrichment testing, and polygenic score analyses, as well as single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) heritability and genetic correlation estimation using linkage disequilibrium score regression.<br />Results: Genome-wide association analysis identified two genome-wide significant loci (involving six SNPs: rs34399104, rs35518298, rs34053895, rs66828456, rs35502061, and rs35256367). Gene-based analyses implicated 22 genes on chromosomes 13, 15, 16, 17, and 19 (q<0.05). Suicide death heritability was estimated at an h <superscript>2</superscript> <subscript>SNP</subscript> value of 0.25 (SE=0.04) and a value of 0.16 (SE=0.02) when converted to a liability scale. Notably, suicide polygenic scores were significantly predictive across training and test sets. Polygenic scores for several other psychiatric disorders and psychological traits were also predictive, particularly scores for behavioral disinhibition and major depressive disorder.<br />Conclusions: Multiple genome-wide significant loci and genes were identified and polygenic score prediction of suicide death case-control status was demonstrated, adjusting for ancestry, in independent training and test sets. Additionally, the suicide death sample was found to have increased genetic risk for behavioral disinhibition, major depressive disorder, depressive symptoms, autism spectrum disorder, psychosis, and alcohol use disorder compared with the control sample.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1535-7228
Volume :
177
Issue :
10
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The American journal of psychiatry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
32998551
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1176/appi.ajp.2020.19101025