Genome-Wide Association Study of Obsessive-Compulsive Symptoms including 33 943 individuals from the general population

Author:

Strom Nora I.ORCID,Burton Christie L.ORCID,Iyegbe ConradORCID,Silzer TalisaORCID,Antonyan LilitORCID,Pool RenéORCID,Lemire MathieuORCID,Crowley James J.ORCID,Hottenga Jouke-JanORCID,Ivanov Volen Z.ORCID,Larsson HenrikORCID,Lichtenstein PaulORCID,Magnusson PatrikORCID,Rück ChristianORCID,Schachar RussellORCID,Wu Hei ManORCID,Cath Danielle,Crosbie JenniferORCID,Mataix-Cols DavidORCID,Boomsma Dorret I.ORCID,Mattheisen ManuelORCID,Meier Sandra M.ORCID,Smit Dirk J.A.ORCID,Arnold Paul D.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractWhile 1-2% of individuals meet the criteria for a clinical diagnosis of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), many more (∼15-40%) experience subclinical obsessive-compulsive symptoms (OCS) during their life. To characterize the genetic underpinnings of OCS and its genetic relationship to OCD, we conducted the largest genome-wide association study (GWAS) meta-analysis of parent- or self-reported OCS to date (N = 33,943 with complete phenotypic and genome-wide data), combining the results from seven large-scale population-based cohorts from Sweden, the Netherlands, England, and Canada (including six twin cohorts and one cohort of unrelated individuals). We found no genome-wide significant associations on the SNP or gene-level, but a polygenic risk score (PRS) based on the OCD GWAS previously published by the Psychiatric Genetics Consortium (PGC-OCD) was significantly associated with OCS (Pfixed= 3.06 ×10−5). Also, one curated gene set (Mootha Gluconeogenesis) reached Bonferroni-corrected significance (Ngenes= 28, Beta = 0.79, SE = 0.16, Pbon= 0.008). Expression of genes in this set is high at sites of insulin-mediated glucose disposal. Dysregulated insulin signaling in the etiology of OCS has been suggested by a previous study describing a genetic overlap of OCS with insulin signaling-related traits in children and adolescents. We report a SNP heritability of 4.1% (P = 0.0044) in the meta-analyzed GWAS, and heritability estimates based on the twin cohorts of 33% - 43%. Genetic correlation analysis showed that OCS were most strongly associated with OCD (rG= 0.72, p = 0.0007) among all tested psychiatric disorders (N = 11). Of all 97 tested phenotypes, 24 showed a significant genetic correlation with OCS, and 66 traits showed concordant directions of effect with OCS and OCD. OCS have a significant polygenic contribution and share genetic risk with diagnosed OCD, supporting the hypothesis that OCD represents the extreme end of widely distributed OCS in the population.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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