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GWAS Study

Genome-wide analysis of insomnia in 1,331,010 individuals identifies new risk loci and functional pathways.

Jansen PR, Watanabe K, Stringer S et al.

30804565 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
1331010 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

JP
Jansen PR
WK
Watanabe K
SS
Stringer S
SN
Skene N
BJ
Bryois J
HA
Hammerschlag AR
DL
de Leeuw CA
BJ
Benjamins JS
MA
Muñoz-Manchado AB
NM
Nagel M
SJ
Savage JE
TH
Tiemeier H
WT
White T
TJ
Tung JY
HD
Hinds DA
VV
Vacic V
WX
Wang X
SP
Sullivan PF
VD
van der Sluis S
PT
Polderman TJC
SA
Smit AB
HJ
Hjerling-Leffler J
VS
Van Someren EJW
PD
Posthuma D
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Insomnia is the second most prevalent mental disorder, with no sufficient treatment available. Despite substantial heritability, insight into the associated genes and neurobiological pathways remains limited. Here, we use a large genetic association sample (n = 1,331,010) to detect novel loci and gain insight into the pathways, tissue and cell types involved in insomnia complaints. We identify 202 loci implicating 956 genes through positional, expression quantitative trait loci, and chromatin mapping. The meta-analysis explained 2.6% of the variance. We show gene set enrichments for the axonal part of neurons, cortical and subcortical tissues, and specific cell types, including striatal, hypothalamic, and claustrum neurons. We found considerable genetic correlations with psychiatric traits and sleep duration, and modest correlations with other sleep-related traits. Mendelian randomization identified the causal effects of insomnia on depression, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease, and the protective effects of educational attainment and intracranial volume. Our findings highlight key brain areas and cell types implicated in insomnia, and provide new treatment targets.

651,923 European ancestry males, 679,087 European ancestry females

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

1331010
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
European
Ancestry
U.K.
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

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