Krapohl E, Euesden J, Zabaneh D, Pingault J-B, Rimfeld K, von Stumm S, Dale P S, Breen G, O'Reilly P F, Plomin R
MRC Social, Genetic and Developmental Psychiatry Centre, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King's College London, London, UK.
Division of Psychology and Language Sciences, University College London, London, UK.
Mol Psychiatry. 2016 Sep;21(9):1188-93. doi: 10.1038/mp.2015.126. Epub 2015 Aug 25.
Genome-wide polygenic scores (GPS), which aggregate the effects of thousands of DNA variants from genome-wide association studies (GWAS), have the potential to make genetic predictions for individuals. We conducted a systematic investigation of associations between GPS and many behavioral traits, the behavioral phenome. For 3152 unrelated 16-year-old individuals representative of the United Kingdom, we created 13 GPS from the largest GWAS for psychiatric disorders (for example, schizophrenia, depression and dementia) and cognitive traits (for example, intelligence, educational attainment and intracranial volume). The behavioral phenome included 50 traits from the domains of psychopathology, personality, cognitive abilities and educational achievement. We examined phenome-wide profiles of associations for the entire distribution of each GPS and for the extremes of the GPS distributions. The cognitive GPS yielded stronger predictive power than the psychiatric GPS in our UK-representative sample of adolescents. For example, education GPS explained variation in adolescents' behavior problems (0.6%) and in educational achievement (2%) but psychiatric GPS were associated with neither. Despite the modest effect sizes of current GPS, quantile analyses illustrate the ability to stratify individuals by GPS and opportunities for research. For example, the highest and lowest septiles for the education GPS yielded a 0.5 s.d. difference in mean math grade and a 0.25 s.d. difference in mean behavior problems. We discuss the usefulness and limitations of GPS based on adult GWAS to predict genetic propensities earlier in development.
全基因组多基因评分(GPS)汇总了来自全基因组关联研究(GWAS)的数千个DNA变异的影响,有潜力对个体进行基因预测。我们对GPS与许多行为特征(行为表型组)之间的关联进行了系统研究。对于3152名代表英国的无亲缘关系的16岁个体,我们根据针对精神疾病(如精神分裂症、抑郁症和痴呆症)和认知特征(如智力、教育程度和颅内体积)的最大GWAS创建了13个GPS。行为表型组包括来自精神病理学、人格、认知能力和教育成就领域的50个特征。我们检查了每个GPS的整个分布以及GPS分布极端情况的全表型组关联概况。在我们这个代表英国青少年的样本中,认知GPS比精神疾病GPS具有更强的预测能力。例如,教育GPS解释了青少年行为问题(约0.6%)和教育成就(约2%)的变异,但精神疾病GPS与两者均无关联。尽管当前GPS的效应量不大,但分位数分析表明了按GPS对个体进行分层的能力以及研究机会。例如,教育GPS的最高和最低七分位数在平均数学成绩上产生了0.5个标准差的差异,在平均行为问题上产生了0.25个标准差的差异。我们讨论了基于成人GWAS的GPS在发育早期预测遗传倾向的有用性和局限性。