Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington, WA.
Department of Psychiatry, Virginia Institute for Psychiatric and Behavioral Genetics, Virginia Commonwealth University, VA.
Sleep. 2020 Apr 15;43(4). doi: 10.1093/sleep/zsz257.
Sleep problems are common, serving as both a predictor and symptom of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), with these bidirectional relationships well established in the literature. While both sleep phenotypes and PTSD are moderately heritable, there has been a paucity of investigation into potential genetic overlap between sleep and PTSD. Here, we estimate genetic correlations between multiple sleep phenotypes (including insomnia symptoms, sleep duration, daytime sleepiness, and chronotype) and PTSD, using results from the largest genome-wide association study (GWAS) to date of PTSD, as well as publicly available GWAS results for sleep phenotypes within UK Biobank data (23 variations, encompassing four main phenotypes).
Genetic correlations were estimated utilizing linkage disequilibrium score regression (LDSC), an approach that uses GWAS summary statistics to compute genetic correlations across traits, and Mendelian randomization (MR) analyses were conducted to follow up on significant correlations.
Significant, moderate genetic correlations were found between insomnia symptoms (rg range 0.36-0.49), oversleeping (rg range 0.32-0.44), undersleeping (rg range 0.48-0.49), and PTSD. In contrast, there were mixed results for continuous sleep duration and daytime sleepiness phenotypes, and chronotype was not correlated with PTSD. MR analyses did not provide evidence for casual effects of sleep phenotypes on PTSD.
Sleep phenotypes, particularly insomnia symptoms and extremes of sleep duration, have shared genetic etiology with PTSD, but causal relationships were not identified. This highlights the importance of further investigation into the overlapping influences on these phenotypes as sample sizes increase and new methods to investigate directionality and causality become available.
睡眠问题很常见,既是创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)的预测因素,也是其症状,这在文献中已经得到了充分的证实。虽然睡眠表型和 PTSD 都具有中度的遗传性,但对于睡眠和 PTSD 之间潜在的遗传重叠,研究还很少。在这里,我们利用迄今为止最大的 PTSD 全基因组关联研究(GWAS)的结果,以及 UK Biobank 数据中睡眠表型的公开可用 GWAS 结果(23 个变异体,包括四个主要表型),估计了多种睡眠表型(包括失眠症状、睡眠时间、白天嗜睡和昼夜节律)与 PTSD 之间的遗传相关性。
使用连锁不平衡评分回归(LDSC)估计遗传相关性,这是一种利用 GWAS 汇总统计数据计算跨特征遗传相关性的方法,并进行了孟德尔随机化(MR)分析以跟进显著相关性。
发现失眠症状(rg 范围 0.36-0.49)、过度睡眠(rg 范围 0.32-0.44)、睡眠不足(rg 范围 0.48-0.49)和 PTSD 之间存在显著的中度遗传相关性。相比之下,连续睡眠时间和白天嗜睡表型的结果则较为混杂,昼夜节律与 PTSD 无关。MR 分析并未提供睡眠表型对 PTSD 有因果影响的证据。
睡眠表型,特别是失眠症状和睡眠时长的极端情况,与 PTSD 具有共同的遗传病因,但未确定因果关系。这突出表明,随着样本量的增加和新的方法来研究方向性和因果关系,进一步研究这些表型之间的重叠影响非常重要。