as soon as is submitted to ZB.
Minimal phenotyping yields GWAS hits of low specificity for major depression.
bioRxiv, accepted (2018)
Minimal phenotyping refers to the reliance on the use of a small number
of self-report items for disease case identification. This strategy has
been applied to genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of major
depressive disorder (MDD). Here we report that the genotype derived
heritability (h2SNP) of depression defined by
minimal phenotyping (14%, SE = 0.8%) is lower than strictly defined MDD
(26%, SE = 2.2%). This cannot be explained by differences in prevalence
between definitions or including cases of lower liability to MDD in
minimal phenotyping definitions of depression, but can be explained by
misdiagnosis of those without depression or with related conditions as
cases of depression. Depression defined by minimal phenotyping is as
genetically correlated with strictly defined MDD (rG = 0.81, SE = 0.03)
as it is with the personality trait neuroticism (rG = 0.84, SE = 0.05), a
trait not defined by the cardinal symptoms of depression. While they
both show similar shared genetic liability with neuroticism, a greater
proportion of the genome contributes to the minimal phenotyping
definitions of depression (80.2%, SE = 0.6%) than to strictly defined
MDD (65.8%, SE = 0.6%). We find that GWAS loci identified in minimal
phenotyping definitions of depression are not specific to MDD: they also
predispose to other psychiatric conditions. Finally, while highly
predictive polygenic risk scores can be generated from minimal
phenotyping definitions of MDD, the predictive power can be explained
entirely by the sample size used to generate the polygenic risk score,
rather than specificity for MDD. Our results reveal that genetic
analysis of minimal phenotyping definitions of depression identifies
non-specific genetic factors shared between MDD and other psychiatric
conditions. Reliance on results from minimal phenotyping for MDD may
thus bias views of the genetic architecture of MDD and may impede our
ability to identify pathways specific to MDD.
Additional Metrics?
Edit extra informations
Login
Publication type
Article: Journal article
Document type
Scientific Article
Journal
bioRxiv
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
Publishing Place
Cold Spring Harbor
Non-patent literature
Publications
Reviewing status
Peer reviewed
Institute(s)
Helmholtz Pioneer Campus (HPC)