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GWAS Study

Associations between genetic loci, environment factors and mental disorders: a genome-wide survival analysis using the UK Biobank data.

Meng P, Ye J, Chu X et al.

35017462 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
376806 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

MP
Meng P
YJ
Ye J
CX
Chu X
CB
Cheng B
CS
Cheng S
LL
Liu L
YX
Yang X
LC
Liang C
ZF
Zhang F
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

It is well-accepted that both environment and genetic factors contribute to the development of mental disorders (MD). However, few genetic studies used time-to-event data analysis to identify the susceptibility genetic variants associated with MD and explore the role of environment factors in these associations. In order to detect novel genetic loci associated with MD based on the time-to-event data and identify the role of environmental factors in them, this study recruited 376,806 participants from the UK Biobank cohort. The MD outcomes (including overall MD status, anxiety, depression and substance use disorders (SUD)) were defined based on in-patient hospital, self-reported and death registry data collected in the UK Biobank. SPACOX approach was used to identify the susceptibility loci for MD using the time-to-event data of the UK Biobank cohort. And then we estimated the associations between identified candidate loci, fourteen environment factors and MD through a phenome-wide association study and mediation analysis. SPACOX identified multiple candidate loci for overall MD status, depression and SUD, such as rs139813674 (P value = 8.39 × 10-9, ZNF684) for overall MD status, rs7231178 (DCC, P value = 2.11 × 10-9) for depression, and rs10228494 (FOXP2, P value = 6.58 × 10-10) for SUD. Multiple environment factors could influence the associations between identified loci and MD, such as confide in others and felt hated. Our study identified novel candidate loci for MD, highlighting the strength of time-to-event data based genetic association studies. We also observed that multiple environment factors could influence the association between susceptibility loci and MD.

56,863 British ancestry cases, 319,943 British ancestry controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

376806
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
European
Ancestry
U.K.
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of health and genetic findings

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