| Literature DB >> 28607503 |
Niamh Mullins1,2, Andrés Ingason1, Heather Porter1,2, Jack Euesden1,2,3, Alexandra Gillett1,2, Sigurgeir Ólafsson1,4, Daniel F Gudbjartsson1, Cathryn M Lewis1,2,5, Engilbert Sigurdsson4,6, Evald Saemundsen7, Ólafur Ó Gudmundsson1, Michael L Frigge1, Augustine Kong1, Agnar Helgason1,8, G Bragi Walters1,4, Omar Gustafsson1, Hreinn Stefansson1, Kari Stefansson1,4.
Abstract
The persistence of common, heritable psychiatric disorders that reduce reproductive fitness is an evolutionary paradox. Here, we investigate the selection pressures on sequence variants that predispose to schizophrenia, autism, bipolar disorder, major depression and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) using genomic data from 150,656 Icelanders, excluding those diagnosed with these psychiatric diseases. Polygenic risk of autism and ADHD is associated with number of children. Higher polygenic risk of autism is associated with fewer children and older age at first child whereas higher polygenic risk of ADHD is associated with having more children. We find no evidence for a selective advantage of a high polygenic risk of schizophrenia or bipolar disorder. Rare copy-number variants conferring moderate to high risk of psychiatric illness are associated with having fewer children and are under stronger negative selection pressure than common sequence variants.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28607503 PMCID: PMC5474730 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms15833
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Figure 1Polygenic risk scores for psychiatric disorders predict their corresponding disorder in the general population of Iceland.
The x axis shows the seven P-value parameters (0.001, 0.003, 0.01, 0.03, 0.1, 0.3 and 1.0) used to weight SNPs from the discovery GWAS plotted left to right. The y axis indicates the Nagelkerke’s pseudo-R2 measure of variance explained.
Association between polygenic risk scores and number of children.
| ADHD | 0.002 | 0.15 (0.05, 0.25) | 0.170 | 0.09 (−0.04, 0.24) | 0.002 | 0.20 (0.07, 0.33) |
| Autism | 0.002 | −0.25 (−0.41, −0.09) | 0.003 | −0.36 (−0.59, −0.12) | 0.130 | −0.16 (−0.38, 0.05) |
| Bipolar disorder | 0.740 | −0.005 (−0.03, 0.02) | 0.500 | 0.01 (−0.02, −0.05) | 0.310 | −0.02 (−0.05, 0.01) |
| Major depression | 0.170 | 0.04 (−0.01, 0.11) | 0.650 | 0.02 (−0.07, 0.12) | 0.094 | 0.07 (−0.01, 0.16) |
| Schizophrenia | 0.160 | 0.006 (−0.002, 0.01) | 0.530 | 0.004 (−0.008, 0.02) | 0.170 | 0.007 (−0.003, 0.02) |
In total, ten tests on number of children were performed; thus the significance threshold is P<0.005.
CI—95% confidence interval
Association between neuropsychiatric CNVs and number of children.
| All CNVs | 201/268 | 42,826/49,161 | −0.405/−0.184 | 0.00028/0.050 | |
| Autism CNVs | 37/60 | 42,990/49,369 | −1.263/−0.481 | 9.4E−07/0.014 | |
| Schizophrenia CNVs | 189/256 | 42,838/49,173 | −0.266/−0.115 | 0.021/0.23 | |
| 16p11.2 del | inf/NA | 12/12 | 43,015/49,417 | −2.534/−1.59 | 1.8E−08/0.00025 |
| 1q21.1 del | NA/8.35 | 11/15 | 43,016/49,414 | −0.741/−0.98 | 0.12/0.012 |
| 22q11.21 del | NA/inf | 3 | 92,453 | −1.421 | 0.11 |
| 16p11.2 dup | 4.1/11.52 | 39 | 92,417 | −0.326 | 0.19 |
| 15q11.2—13.1 dup | inf/13.20 | 4 | 92,452 | −0.926 | 0.23 |
| 7q11.23 (WBS) dup | NA/11.35 | 3 | 92,453 | −1.150 | 0.23 |
| 15q13.3 all del | inf/7.52 | 19 | 92,437 | −0.343 | 0.34 |
| 16p13.1 dup | NA/2.30 | 103 | 92,353 | −0.128 | 0.41 |
| 2p16.1 (NRXN1) del | 5.6/9.01 | 11 | 92,445 | −0.353 | 0.45 |
| 15q11.2 all del | NA/2.15 | 192 | 92,264 | −0.058 | 0.61 |
| 1q21.1 dup | NA/3.45 | 38 | 92,418 | 0.049 | 0.85 |
Results are shown in males and females separately when there is a significant (P<0.05) association in either group. Counting all models fitted, 28 tests were performed; thus the significance threshold is P<0.0017. Odds ratios for autism and schizophrenia are from the literature78.
Association between polygenic risk scores and age at first child.
| ADHD | 0.0003 | −0.59 (−0.92, −0.26) | 0.07 | −0.48 (−0.99, −0.03) | 0.0005 | −0.71 (−1.12, −0.31) |
| Autism | 0.0004 | 0.97 (0.43, 1.51) | 0.03 | 0.91 (0.08, 1.76) | 0.001 | 1.10 (0.45, 1.77) |
| Bipolar disorder | 0.005 | 0.14 (0.04, 0.23) | 0.18 | 0.10 (−0.04, 0.25) | 0.007 | 0.16 (0.04 − 0.28) |
| Major depression | 0.006 | −0.31 (−0.54, −0.09) | 0.71 | −0.06 (−0.42, 0.28) | 9.00E−05 | −0.56 (−0.84, −0.28) |
| Schizophrenia | 0.07 | −0.02 (−0.05, 0.003) | 0.81 | −0.005 (−0.05, 0.04) | 0.02 | −0.04 (−0.07, −0.01) |
In total, ten tests on age at first child were performed; thus the significance threshold is P<0.005.
CI—95% confidence interval