作者
Danielle Posthuma
发表日期
2018/5/1
期刊
Molecular psychiatry
卷号
23
期号
5
页码范围
1181-1188
出版商
Nature Publishing Group
简介
Two obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have been published by independent OCD consortia, the International Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder Foundation Genetics Collaborative (IOCDF-GC) and the OCD Collaborative Genetics Association Study (OCGAS), but many of the top-ranked signals were supported in only one study. We therefore conducted a meta-analysis from the two consortia, investigating a total of 2688 individuals of European ancestry with OCD and 7037 genomically matched controls. No single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) reached genome-wide significance. However, in comparison with the two individual GWASs, the distribution of P-values shifted toward significance. The top haplotypic blocks were tagged with rs4733767 (P= 7.1× 10-7; odds ratio (OR)= 1.21; confidence interval (CI): 1.12-1.31, CASC8/CASC11), rs1030757 (P= 1.1× 10-6; OR= 1.18; CI: 1.10-1.26, GRID2) and rs12504244 (P= 1.6× 10-6; OR= 1.18; CI: 1.11-1.27, KIT). Variants located in or near the genes ASB13, RSPO4, DLGAP1, PTPRD, GRIK2, FAIM2 and CDH20, identified in linkage peaks and the original GWASs, were among the top signals. Polygenic risk scores for each individual study predicted case-control status in the other by explaining 0.9%(P= 0.003) and 0.3%(P= 0.0009) of the phenotypic variance in OCGAS and the European IOCDF-GC target samples, respectively. The common SNP heritability in the combined OCGAS and IOCDF-GC sample was estimated to be 0.28 (se= 0.04). Strikingly,∼ 65% of the SNP-based heritability in the OCGAS sample was accounted for by SNPs with minor …
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