학술논문

Interrogating the Genetic Determinants of Tourette’s Syndrome and Other Tic Disorders Through Genome-Wide Association Studies
Document Type
article
Author
Yu, DongmeiSul, Jae HoonTsetsos, FotisNawaz, Muhammad SHuang, Alden YZelaya, IvetteIllmann, CorneliaOsiecki, LisaDarrow, Sabrina MHirschtritt, Matthew EGreenberg, EricaMuller-Vahl, Kirsten RStuhrmann, ManfredDion, YvesRouleau, GuyAschauer, HaraldStamenkovic, MaraSchlögelhofer, MonikaSandor, PaulBarr, Cathy LGrados, MarcoSinger, Harvey SNöthen, Markus MHebebrand, JohannesHinney, AnkeKing, Robert AFernandez, Thomas VBarta, CsabaTarnok, ZsanettNagy, PeterDepienne, ChristelWorbe, YuliaHartmann, AndreasBudman, Cathy LRizzo, RenataLyon, Gholson JMcMahon, William MBatterson, James RCath, Danielle CMalaty, Irene AOkun, Michael SBerlin, ChestonWoods, Douglas WLee, Paul CJankovic, JosephRobertson, Mary MGilbert, Donald LBrown, Lawrence WCoffey, Barbara JDietrich, AndreaHoekstra, Pieter JKuperman, SamuelZinner, Samuel HLuðvigsson, PéturSæmundsen, EvaldThorarensen, ÓlafurAtzmon, GilBarzilai, NirWagner, MichaelMoessner, RainaldOphoff, RoelPato, Carlos NPato, Michele TKnowles, James ARoffman, Joshua LSmoller, Jordan WBuckner, Randy LWillsey, A JeremyTischfield, Jay AHeiman, Gary AStefansson, HreinnStefansson, KáriPosthuma, DanielleCox, Nancy JPauls, David LFreimer, Nelson BNeale, Benjamin MDavis, Lea KPaschou, PeristeraCoppola, GiovanniMathews, Carol AScharf, Jeremiah M
Source
American Journal of Psychiatry. 176(3)
Subject
Mental Health
Prevention
Brain Disorders
Human Genome
Neurosciences
Neurodegenerative
Serious Mental Illness
Tourette Syndrome
Genetics
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Case-Control Studies
Genetic Predisposition to Disease
Genome-Wide Association Study
Humans
Multifactorial Inheritance
Polymorphism
Single Nucleotide
Risk Factors
Severity of Illness Index
Tic Disorders
fms-Like Tyrosine Kinase 3
Tourette Association of America International Consortium for Genetics
the Gilles de la Tourette GWAS Replication Initiative
the Tourette International Collaborative Genetics Study
and the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium Tourette Syndrome Working Group
Child Psychiatry
Medical and Health Sciences
Psychology and Cognitive Sciences
Psychiatry
Language
Abstract
ObjectiveTourette's syndrome is polygenic and highly heritable. Genome-wide association study (GWAS) approaches are useful for interrogating the genetic architecture and determinants of Tourette's syndrome and other tic disorders. The authors conducted a GWAS meta-analysis and probed aggregated Tourette's syndrome polygenic risk to test whether Tourette's and related tic disorders have an underlying shared genetic etiology and whether Tourette's polygenic risk scores correlate with worst-ever tic severity and may represent a potential predictor of disease severity.MethodsGWAS meta-analysis, gene-based association, and genetic enrichment analyses were conducted in 4,819 Tourette's syndrome case subjects and 9,488 control subjects. Replication of top loci was conducted in an independent population-based sample (706 case subjects, 6,068 control subjects). Relationships between Tourette's polygenic risk scores (PRSs), other tic disorders, ascertainment, and tic severity were examined.ResultsGWAS and gene-based analyses identified one genome-wide significant locus within FLT3 on chromosome 13, rs2504235, although this association was not replicated in the population-based sample. Genetic variants spanning evolutionarily conserved regions significantly explained 92.4% of Tourette's syndrome heritability. Tourette's-associated genes were significantly preferentially expressed in dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. Tourette's PRS significantly predicted both Tourette's syndrome and tic spectrum disorders status in the population-based sample. Tourette's PRS also significantly correlated with worst-ever tic severity and was higher in case subjects with a family history of tics than in simplex case subjects.ConclusionsModulation of gene expression through noncoding variants, particularly within cortico-striatal circuits, is implicated as a fundamental mechanism in Tourette's syndrome pathogenesis. At a genetic level, tic disorders represent a continuous spectrum of disease, supporting the unification of Tourette's syndrome and other tic disorders in future diagnostic schemata. Tourette's PRSs derived from sufficiently large samples may be useful in the future for predicting conversion of transient tics to chronic tic disorders, as well as tic persistence and lifetime tic severity.