학술논문

Psychiatric gene discoveries shape evidence on ADHD’s biology
Document Type
article
Source
Molecular Psychiatry. 21(9)
Subject
Biological Psychology
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Psychology
Pediatric
Neurosciences
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)
Autism
Biotechnology
Genetics
Schizophrenia
Brain Disorders
Mental Health
Human Genome
Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (IDD)
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Aetiology
Mental health
Good Health and Well Being
Adolescent
Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity
Autistic Disorder
Biological Psychiatry
Canada
Child
Child
Preschool
DNA Copy Number Variations
Databases
Nucleic Acid
Europe
Female
Genetic Association Studies
Genetic Predisposition to Disease
Genome-Wide Association Study
Humans
Ireland
Male
Neurodevelopmental Disorders
Polymorphism
Single Nucleotide
United Kingdom
Biological Sciences
Medical and Health Sciences
Psychology and Cognitive Sciences
Psychiatry
Clinical sciences
Biological psychology
Clinical and health psychology
Language
Abstract
A strong motivation for undertaking psychiatric gene discovery studies is to provide novel insights into unknown biology. Although attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is highly heritable, and large, rare copy number variants (CNVs) contribute to risk, little is known about its pathogenesis and it remains commonly misunderstood. We assembled and pooled five ADHD and control CNV data sets from the United Kingdom, Ireland, United States of America, Northern Europe and Canada. Our aim was to test for enrichment of neurodevelopmental gene sets, implicated by recent exome-sequencing studies of (a) schizophrenia and (b) autism as a means of testing the hypothesis that common pathogenic mechanisms underlie ADHD and these other neurodevelopmental disorders. We also undertook hypothesis-free testing of all biological pathways. We observed significant enrichment of individual genes previously found to harbour schizophrenia de novo non-synonymous single-nucleotide variants (SNVs; P=5.4 × 10(-4)) and targets of the Fragile X mental retardation protein (P=0.0018). No enrichment was observed for activity-regulated cytoskeleton-associated protein (P=0.23) or N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (P=0.74) post-synaptic signalling gene sets previously implicated in schizophrenia. Enrichment of ADHD CNV hits for genes impacted by autism de novo SNVs (P=0.019 for non-synonymous SNV genes) did not survive Bonferroni correction. Hypothesis-free testing yielded several highly significantly enriched biological pathways, including ion channel pathways. Enrichment findings were robust to multiple testing corrections and to sensitivity analyses that excluded the most significant sample. The findings reveal that CNVs in ADHD converge on biologically meaningful gene clusters, including ones now established as conferring risk of other neurodevelopmental disorders.