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GWAS Study

Kleine-Levin syndrome is associated with birth difficulties and genetic variants in the <i>TRANK1</i> gene loci.

Ambati A, Hillary R, Leu-Semenescu S et al.

33737391 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
18139 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

AA
Ambati A
HR
Hillary R
LS
Leu-Semenescu S
OH
Ollila HM
LL
Lin L
DE
During EH
FN
Farber N
RT
Rico TJ
FJ
Faraco J
LE
Leary E
GA
Goldstein-Piekarski AN
HY
Huang YS
HF
Han F
SY
Sivan Y
LM
Lecendreux M
DP
Dodet P
HM
Honda M
GN
Gadoth N
NS
Nevsimalova S
PF
Pizza F
KT
Kanbayashi T
PR
Peraita-Adrados R
LG
Leschziner GD
HR
Hasan R
CF
Canellas F
KK
Kume K
DM
Daniilidou M
BP
Bourgin P
RD
Rye D
VJ
Vicario JL
HB
Hogl B
HS
Hong SC
PG
Plazzi G
MG
Mayer G
LA
Landtblom AM
DY
Dauvilliers Y
AI
Arnulf I
ME
Mignot EJ
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Kleine-Levin syndrome (KLS) is a rare disorder characterized by severe episodic hypersomnia, with cognitive impairment accompanied by apathy or disinhibition. Pathophysiology is unknown, although imaging studies indicate decreased activity in hypothalamic/thalamic areas during episodes. Familial occurrence is increased, and risk is associated with reports of a difficult birth. We conducted a worldwide case-control genome-wide association study in 673 KLS cases collected over 14 y, and ethnically matched 15,341 control individuals. We found a strong genome-wide significant association (rs71947865, Odds Ratio [OR] = 1.48, P = 8.6 × 10-9) within the 3'region of TRANK1 gene locus, previously associated with bipolar disorder and schizophrenia. Strikingly, KLS cases with rs71947865 variant had significantly increased reports of a difficult birth. As perinatal outcomes have dramatically improved over the last 40 y, we further stratified our sample by birth years and found that recent cases had a significantly reduced rs71947865 association. While the rs71947865 association did not replicate in the entire follow-up sample of 171 KLS cases, rs71947865 was significantly associated with KLS in the subset follow-up sample of 59 KLS cases who reported birth difficulties (OR = 1.54, P = 0.01). Genetic liability of KLS as explained by polygenic risk scores was increased (pseudo R2 = 0.15; P &lt; 2.0 × 10-22 at P = 0.5 threshold) in the follow-up sample. Pathway analysis of genetic associations identified enrichment of circadian regulation pathway genes in KLS cases. Our results suggest links between KLS, circadian regulation, and bipolar disorder, and indicate that the TRANK1 polymorphisms in conjunction with reported birth difficulties may predispose to KLS.

136 Asian ancestry cases, 3,123 Asian ancestry controls, 299 European ancestry cases, 9,373 European ancestry controls, 16 Latino cases, 1,980 Latino controls, 41 Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry cases, 183 Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry controls, 181 non-Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry cases, 680 non-Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

18139
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
Yes
Replicated
171 cases, 1,956 controls
Replication Participants
Asian unspecified, European, Hispanic or Latin American, Other
Ancestry
Chapter IV

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