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GWAS Study

Polygenic contributions to performance on the Balloon Analogue Risk Task.

Nurmi EL, Laughlin CP, de Wit H et al.

37582857 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
2072 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

NE
Nurmi EL
LC
Laughlin CP
DW
de Wit H
PA
Palmer AA
MJ
MacKillop J
CT
Cannon TD
BR
Bilder RM
CE
Congdon E
SF
Sabb FW
SL
Seaman LC
MJ
McElroy JJ
LM
Libowitz MR
WJ
Weafer J
GJ
Gray J
DA
Dean AC
HG
Hellemann GS
LE
London ED
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Risky decision-making is a common, heritable endophenotype seen across many psychiatric disorders. Its underlying genetic architecture is incompletely explored. We examined behavior in the Balloon Analogue Risk Task (BART), which tests risky decision-making, in two independent samples of European ancestry. One sample (n = 1138) comprised healthy participants and some psychiatric patients (53 schizophrenia, 42 bipolar disorder, 47 ADHD); the other (n = 911) excluded for recent treatment of various psychiatric disorders but not ADHD. Participants provided DNA and performed the BART, indexed by mean adjusted pumps. We constructed a polygenic risk score (PRS) for discovery in each dataset and tested it in the other as replication. Subsequently, a genome-wide MEGA-analysis, combining both samples, tested genetic correlation with risk-taking self-report in the UK Biobank sample and psychiatric phenotypes characterized by risk-taking (ADHD, Bipolar Disorder, Alcohol Use Disorder, prior cannabis use) in the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium. The PRS for BART performance in one dataset predicted task performance in the replication sample (r = 0.13, p = 0.000012, pFDR = 0.000052), as did the reciprocal analysis (r = 0.09, p = 0.0083, pFDR=0.04). Excluding participants with psychiatric diagnoses produced similar results. The MEGA-GWAS identified a single SNP (rs12023073; p = 3.24 × 10-8) near IGSF21, a protein involved in inhibitory brain synapses; replication samples are needed to validate this result. A PRS for self-reported cannabis use (p = 0.00047, pFDR = 0.0053), but not self-reported risk-taking or psychiatric disorder status, predicted behavior on the BART in our MEGA-GWAS sample. The findings reveal polygenic architecture of risky decision-making as measured by the BART and highlight its overlap with cannabis use.

1,665 European ancestry individuals, 407 Hispanic or Latin American individuals

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

2072
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
European, Hispanic or Latin American
Ancestry
U.S.
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

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