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GWAS Study

Symptom-level modelling unravels the shared genetic architecture of anxiety and depression.

Thorp JG, Campos AI, Grotzinger AD et al.

33859377 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
2079337 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

TJ
Thorp JG
CA
Campos AI
GA
Grotzinger AD
GZ
Gerring ZF
AJ
An J
OJ
Ong JS
WW
Wang W
SS
Shringarpure S
BE
Byrne EM
MS
MacGregor S
MN
Martin NG
MS
Medland SE
MC
Middeldorp CM
DE
Derks EM
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Depression and anxiety are highly prevalent and comorbid psychiatric traits that cause considerable burden worldwide. Here we use factor analysis and genomic structural equation modelling to investigate the genetic factor structure underlying 28 items assessing depression, anxiety and neuroticism, a closely related personality trait. Symptoms of depression and anxiety loaded on two distinct, although highly genetically correlated factors, and neuroticism items were partitioned between them. We used this factor structure to conduct genome-wide association analyses on latent factors of depressive symptoms (89 independent variants, 61 genomic loci) and anxiety symptoms (102 variants, 73 loci) in the UK Biobank. Of these associated variants, 72% and 78%, respectively, replicated in an independent cohort of approximately 1.9 million individuals with self-reported diagnosis of depression and anxiety. We use these results to characterize shared and trait-specific genetic associations. Our findings provide insight into the genetic architecture of depression and anxiety and comorbidity between them.

at least 5,919 European ancestry cases, at least 130,691 European ancestry controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

2079337
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
Yes
Replicated
634,037 European ancestry cases, 1,308,690 European ancestry controls
Replication Participants
European
Ancestry
U.K.
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

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