학술논문

Genetic Markers of Human Evolution Are Enriched in Schizophrenia
Document Type
article
Source
Biological Psychiatry. 80(4)
Subject
Biological Sciences
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Genetics
Biological Psychology
Psychology
Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences
Prevention
Clinical Research
Mental Health
Biotechnology
Schizophrenia
Brain Disorders
Human Genome
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Mental health
Biological Evolution
Brain
Genetic Markers
Genetic Predisposition to Disease
Genome-Wide Association Study
Humans
Multifactorial Inheritance
Polymorphism
Single Nucleotide
Evolution
GWAS
Human
Neanderthal
Polygenic
Schizophrenia Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium
The International Headache Genetics Consortium
Medical and Health Sciences
Psychology and Cognitive Sciences
Psychiatry
Biological sciences
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Language
Abstract
BackgroundWhy schizophrenia has accompanied humans throughout our history despite its negative effect on fitness remains an evolutionary enigma. It is proposed that schizophrenia is a by-product of the complex evolution of the human brain and a compromise for humans' language, creative thinking, and cognitive abilities.MethodsWe analyzed recent large genome-wide association studies of schizophrenia and a range of other human phenotypes (anthropometric measures, cardiovascular disease risk factors, immune-mediated diseases) using a statistical framework that draws on polygenic architecture and ancillary information on genetic variants. We used information from the evolutionary proxy measure called the Neanderthal selective sweep (NSS) score.ResultsGene loci associated with schizophrenia are significantly (p = 7.30 × 10(-9)) more prevalent in genomic regions that are likely to have undergone recent positive selection in humans (i.e., with a low NSS score). Variants in brain-related genes with a low NSS score confer significantly higher susceptibility than variants in other brain-related genes. The enrichment is strongest for schizophrenia, but we cannot rule out enrichment for other phenotypes. The false discovery rate conditional on the evolutionary proxy points to 27 candidate schizophrenia susceptibility loci, 12 of which are associated with schizophrenia and other psychiatric disorders or linked to brain development.ConclusionsOur results suggest that there is a polygenic overlap between schizophrenia and NSS score, a marker of human evolution, which is in line with the hypothesis that the persistence of schizophrenia is related to the evolutionary process of becoming human.