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Biological and clinical insights from genetics of insomnia symptoms

Authors :
Hassan S. Dashti
Frank A.J.L. Scheer
Andrew R. Wood
Robin N Beaumont
Yanwei Song
Brian E. Cade
Kristian Hveem
Richa Saxena
Martin K. Rutter
Debbie A Lawlor
Max A. Little
Ben Michael Brumpton
Simon D. Kyle
Jack Bowden
Sekar Kathiresan
Rebecca C Richmond
Jacqueline M. Lane
Simon G. Anderson
Vincent T. van Hees
Hunt All In Sleep
Jessica Tyrrell
Linn B Strand
Cristen J. Willer
John W. Winkelman
Andrew S. I. Loudon
Samuel E. Jones
Kai Spiegelhalder
Krunal Patel
Timothy M. Frayling
Susan Redline
Heming Wang
David W. Ray
Annemarie I. Luik
Krishna G. Aragam
Shaun Purcell
Bendik S. Winsvold
Jonas B. Nielsen
David A. Bechtold
John-Anker Zwart
Michael N. Weedon
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2018.

Abstract

Insomnia is a common disorder linked with adverse long-term medical and psychiatric outcomes, but underlying pathophysiological processes and causal relationships with disease are poorly understood. Here we identify 57 loci for self-reported insomnia symptoms in the UK Biobank (n=453,379) and confirm their impact on self-reported insomnia symptoms in the HUNT study (n=14,923 cases, 47,610 controls), physician diagnosed insomnia in Partners Biobank (n=2,217 cases, 14,240 controls), and accelerometer-derived measures of sleep efficiency and sleep duration in the UK Biobank (n=83,726). Our results suggest enrichment of genes involved in ubiquitin-mediated proteolysis, phototransduction and muscle development pathways and of genes expressed in multiple brain regions, skeletal muscle and adrenal gland. Evidence of shared genetic factors is found between frequent insomnia symptoms and restless legs syndrome, aging, cardio-metabolic, behavioral, psychiatric and reproductive traits. Evidence is found for a possible causal link between insomnia symptoms and coronary heart disease, depressive symptoms and subjective well-being.One Sentence SummaryWe identify 57 genomic regions associated with insomnia pointing to the involvement of phototransduction and ubiquitination and potential causal links to CAD and depression.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....497c44370882c358384a41748c478106
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/257956