Article (Scientific journals)
Significant Locus and Metabolic Genetic Correlations Revealed in Genome-Wide Association Study of Anorexia Nervosa.
Duncan, Laramie; Yilmaz, Zeynep; Gaspar, Helena et al.
2017In American Journal of Psychiatry, p. 201716121402
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Keywords :
Anorexia Nervosa; Diabetes; Eating Disorders; GWAS; Genetics; Metabolism
Abstract :
[en] OBJECTIVE: The authors conducted a genome-wide association study of anorexia nervosa and calculated genetic correlations with a series of psychiatric, educational, and metabolic phenotypes. METHOD: Following uniform quality control and imputation procedures using the 1000 Genomes Project (phase 3) in 12 case-control cohorts comprising 3,495 anorexia nervosa cases and 10,982 controls, the authors performed standard association analysis followed by a meta-analysis across cohorts. Linkage disequilibrium score regression was used to calculate genome-wide common variant heritability (single-nucleotide polymorphism [SNP]-based heritability [h2SNP]), partitioned heritability, and genetic correlations (rg) between anorexia nervosa and 159 other phenotypes. RESULTS: Results were obtained for 10,641,224 SNPs and insertion-deletion variants with minor allele frequencies >1% and imputation quality scores >0.6. The h2SNP of anorexia nervosa was 0.20 (SE=0.02), suggesting that a substantial fraction of the twin-based heritability arises from common genetic variation. The authors identified one genome-wide significant locus on chromosome 12 (rs4622308) in a region harboring a previously reported type 1 diabetes and autoimmune disorder locus. Significant positive genetic correlations were observed between anorexia nervosa and schizophrenia, neuroticism, educational attainment, and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, and significant negative genetic correlations were observed between anorexia nervosa and body mass index, insulin, glucose, and lipid phenotypes. CONCLUSIONS: Anorexia nervosa is a complex heritable phenotype for which this study has uncovered the first genome-wide significant locus. Anorexia nervosa also has large and significant genetic correlations with both psychiatric phenotypes and metabolic traits. The study results encourage a reconceptualization of this frequently lethal disorder as one with both psychiatric and metabolic etiology.
Disciplines :
Genetics & genetic processes
Author, co-author :
Duncan, Laramie
Yilmaz, Zeynep
Gaspar, Helena
Walters, Raymond
Goldstein, Jackie
Anttila, Verneri
Bulik-Sullivan, Brendan
Ripke, Stephan
Thornton, Laura M.
Hinney, Anke
Daly, Mark
Sullivan, Patrick F.
Zeggini, Eleftheria
Breen, Gerome
Bulik, Cynthia M.
More authors (5 more) Less
Other collaborator :
DOCAMPO MARTINEZ, Elisa ;  Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Liège - CHU > Service de rhumatologie
Language :
English
Title :
Significant Locus and Metabolic Genetic Correlations Revealed in Genome-Wide Association Study of Anorexia Nervosa.
Publication date :
2017
Journal title :
American Journal of Psychiatry
ISSN :
0002-953X
eISSN :
1535-7228
Publisher :
American Psychiatric Publishing, United States - Virginia
Pages :
appiajp201716121402
Peer reviewed :
Peer Reviewed verified by ORBi
Available on ORBi :
since 23 June 2017

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