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GWAS Study

Polygenic risk score and heritability estimates reveals a genetic relationship between ASD and OCD.

Guo W, Samuels JF, Wang Y et al.

28641744 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
9896 Participants
103 Views
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

GW
Guo W
SJ
Samuels JF
WY
Wang Y
CH
Cao H
RM
Ritter M
NP
Nestadt PS
KJ
Krasnow J
GB
Greenberg BD
FA
Fyer AJ
MJ
McCracken JT
GD
Geller DA
MD
Murphy DL
KJ
Knowles JA
GM
Grados MA
RM
Riddle MA
RS
Rasmussen SA
MN
McLaughlin NC
NE
Nurmi EL
AK
Askland KD
CB
Cullen BA
PJ
Piacentini J
PD
Pauls DL
BO
Bienvenu OJ
SS
Stewart SE
GF
Goes FS
MB
Maher B
PA
Pulver AE
VD
Valle D
MM
Mattheisen M
QJ
Qian J
NG
Nestadt G
SY
Shugart YY
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are both highly heritable neurodevelopmental disorders that conceivably share genetic risk factors. However, the underlying genetic determinants remain largely unknown. In this work, the authors describe a combined genome-wide association study (GWAS) of ASD and OCD. The OCD dataset includes 2998 individuals in nuclear families. The ASD dataset includes 6898 individuals in case-parents trios. GWAS summary statistics were examined for potential enrichment of functional variants associated with gene expression levels in brain regions. The top ranked SNP is rs4785741 (chromosome 16) with P value=6.9×10-7 in our re-analysis. Polygenic risk score analyses were conducted to investigate the genetic relationship within and across the two disorders. These analyses identified a significant polygenic component of ASD, predicting 0.11% of the phenotypic variance in an independent OCD data set. In addition, we examined the genomic architecture of ASD and OCD by estimating heritability on different chromosomes and different allele frequencies, analyzing genome-wide common variant data by using the Genome-wide Complex Trait Analysis (GCTA) program. The estimated global heritability of OCD is 0.427 (se=0.093) and 0.174 (se=0.053) for ASD in these imputed data.

2,998 European ancestry obsessive-compulsive disorder cases, 6,898 European ancestry autism spectrum disorder cases

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

9896
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
European
Ancestry
U.S.
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

AI-Generated Summary

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