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Genomic influences on self-reported childhood maltreatment.

Authors :
Dalvie, Shareefa
Dalvie, Shareefa
Maihofer, Adam X
Coleman, Jonathan RI
Bradley, Bekh
Breen, Gerome
Brick, Leslie A
Chen, Chia-Yen
Choi, Karmel W
Duncan, Laramie E
Guffanti, Guia
Haas, Magali
Harnal, Supriya
Liberzon, Israel
Nugent, Nicole R
Provost, Allison C
Ressler, Kerry J
Torres, Katy
Amstadter, Ananda B
Bryn Austin, S
Baker, Dewleen G
Bolger, Elizabeth A
Bryant, Richard A
Calabrese, Joseph R
Delahanty, Douglas L
Farrer, Lindsay A
Feeny, Norah C
Flory, Janine D
Forbes, David
Galea, Sandro
Gautam, Aarti
Gelernter, Joel
Hammamieh, Rasha
Jett, Marti
Junglen, Angela G
Kaufman, Milissa L
Kessler, Ronald C
Khan, Alaptagin
Kranzler, Henry R
Lebois, Lauren AM
Marmar, Charles
Mavissakalian, Matig R
McFarlane, Alexander
Donnell, Meaghan O'
Orcutt, Holly K
Pietrzak, Robert H
Risbrough, Victoria B
Roberts, Andrea L
Rothbaum, Alex O
Roy-Byrne, Peter
Ruggiero, Ken
Seligowski, Antonia V
Sheerin, Christina M
Silove, Derrick
Smoller, Jordan W
Stein, Murray B
Teicher, Martin H
Ursano, Robert J
Van Hooff, Miranda
Winternitz, Sherry
Wolff, Jonathan D
Yehuda, Rachel
Zhao, Hongyu
Zoellner, Lori A
Stein, Dan J
Koenen, Karestan C
Nievergelt, Caroline M
Dalvie, Shareefa
Dalvie, Shareefa
Maihofer, Adam X
Coleman, Jonathan RI
Bradley, Bekh
Breen, Gerome
Brick, Leslie A
Chen, Chia-Yen
Choi, Karmel W
Duncan, Laramie E
Guffanti, Guia
Haas, Magali
Harnal, Supriya
Liberzon, Israel
Nugent, Nicole R
Provost, Allison C
Ressler, Kerry J
Torres, Katy
Amstadter, Ananda B
Bryn Austin, S
Baker, Dewleen G
Bolger, Elizabeth A
Bryant, Richard A
Calabrese, Joseph R
Delahanty, Douglas L
Farrer, Lindsay A
Feeny, Norah C
Flory, Janine D
Forbes, David
Galea, Sandro
Gautam, Aarti
Gelernter, Joel
Hammamieh, Rasha
Jett, Marti
Junglen, Angela G
Kaufman, Milissa L
Kessler, Ronald C
Khan, Alaptagin
Kranzler, Henry R
Lebois, Lauren AM
Marmar, Charles
Mavissakalian, Matig R
McFarlane, Alexander
Donnell, Meaghan O'
Orcutt, Holly K
Pietrzak, Robert H
Risbrough, Victoria B
Roberts, Andrea L
Rothbaum, Alex O
Roy-Byrne, Peter
Ruggiero, Ken
Seligowski, Antonia V
Sheerin, Christina M
Silove, Derrick
Smoller, Jordan W
Stein, Murray B
Teicher, Martin H
Ursano, Robert J
Van Hooff, Miranda
Winternitz, Sherry
Wolff, Jonathan D
Yehuda, Rachel
Zhao, Hongyu
Zoellner, Lori A
Stein, Dan J
Koenen, Karestan C
Nievergelt, Caroline M
Source :
Translational psychiatry; vol 10, iss 1, 38; 2158-3188
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Childhood maltreatment is highly prevalent and serves as a risk factor for mental and physical disorders. Self-reported childhood maltreatment appears heritable, but the specific genetic influences on this phenotype are largely unknown. The aims of this study were to (1) identify genetic variation associated with self-reported childhood maltreatment, (2) estimate SNP-based heritability (h2snp), (3) assess predictive value of polygenic risk scores (PRS) for childhood maltreatment, and (4) quantify genetic overlap of childhood maltreatment with mental and physical health-related phenotypes, and condition the top hits from our analyses when such overlap is present. Genome-wide association analysis for childhood maltreatment was undertaken, using a discovery sample from the UK Biobank (UKBB) (n = 124,000) and a replication sample from the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium-posttraumatic stress disorder group (PGC-PTSD) (n = 26,290). h2snp for childhood maltreatment and genetic correlations with mental/physical health traits were calculated using linkage disequilibrium score regression. PRS was calculated using PRSice and mtCOJO was used to perform conditional analysis. Two genome-wide significant loci associated with childhood maltreatment (rs142346759, p = 4.35 × 10-8, FOXP1; rs10262462, p = 3.24 × 10-8, FOXP2) were identified in the discovery dataset but were not replicated in PGC-PTSD. h2snp for childhood maltreatment was ~6% and the PRS derived from the UKBB was significantly predictive of childhood maltreatment in PGC-PTSD (r2 = 0.0025; p = 1.8 × 10-15). The most significant genetic correlation of childhood maltreatment was with depressive symptoms (rg = 0.70, p = 4.65 × 10-40), although we show evidence that our top hits may be specific to childhood maltreatment. This is the first large-scale genetic study to identify specific variants associated with self-reported childhood maltreatment. Speculatively, FOXP genes might influence externalizing traits and so be releva

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Translational psychiatry; vol 10, iss 1, 38; 2158-3188
Notes :
application/pdf, Translational psychiatry vol 10, iss 1, 38 2158-3188
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1287347390
Document Type :
Electronic Resource