학술논문

Polygenic prediction of educational attainment within and between families from genome-wide association analyses in 3 million individuals
Document Type
article
Source
Nature Genetics. 54(4)
Subject
Human Genome
Genetics
Pediatric
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Genome-Wide Association Study
Humans
Multifactorial Inheritance
Polymorphism
Single Nucleotide
23andMe Research Team
Social Science Genetic Association Consortium
Biological Sciences
Medical and Health Sciences
Developmental Biology
Language
Abstract
We conduct a genome-wide association study (GWAS) of educational attainment (EA) in a sample of ~3 million individuals and identify 3,952 approximately uncorrelated genome-wide-significant single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). A genome-wide polygenic predictor, or polygenic index (PGI), explains 12-16% of EA variance and contributes to risk prediction for ten diseases. Direct effects (i.e., controlling for parental PGIs) explain roughly half the PGI's magnitude of association with EA and other phenotypes. The correlation between mate-pair PGIs is far too large to be consistent with phenotypic assortment alone, implying additional assortment on PGI-associated factors. In an additional GWAS of dominance deviations from the additive model, we identify no genome-wide-significant SNPs, and a separate X-chromosome additive GWAS identifies 57.