Department of Human Genetics, Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Transl Psychiatry. 2020 Apr 27;10(1):121. doi: 10.1038/s41398-020-0793-y.
Obsessive-compulsive symptoms (OCS) in the population have been linked to obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) in genetic and epidemiological studies. Insulin signaling has been implicated in OCD. We extend previous work by assessing genetic overlap between OCD, population-based OCS, and central nervous system (CNS) and peripheral insulin signaling. We conducted genome-wide association studies (GWASs) in the population-based Philadelphia Neurodevelopmental Cohort (PNC, 650 children and adolescents) of the total OCS score and six OCS factors from an exploratory factor analysis of 22 questions. Subsequently, we performed polygenic risk score (PRS)-based analysis to assess shared genetic etiologies between clinical OCD (using GWAS data from the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium), the total OCS score and OCS factors. We then performed gene-set analyses with a set of OCD-linked genes centered around CNS insulin-regulated synaptic function and PRS-based analyses for five peripheral insulin signaling-related traits. For validation purposes, we explored data from the independent Spit for Science population cohort (5,047 children and adolescents). In the PNC, we found a significant shared genetic etiology between OCD and 'guilty taboo thoughts'. In the Spit for Science cohort, we additionally observed genetic sharing between 'symmetry/counting/ordering' and 'contamination/cleaning'. The CNS insulin-linked gene-set also associated with 'symmetry/counting/ordering' in the PNC. Further, we identified genetic sharing between peripheral insulin signaling-related traits: type 2 diabetes with 'aggressive taboo thoughts', and levels of fasting insulin and 2 h glucose with OCD. In conclusion, OCD, OCS in the population and insulin-related traits share genetic risk factors, indicating a common etiological mechanism underlying somatic and psychiatric disorders.
强迫症症状(OCS)在人群中与强迫症(OCD)在遗传和流行病学研究中有关。胰岛素信号已被牵连到 OCD 中。我们通过评估 OCD、基于人群的 OCS 和中枢神经系统(CNS)和外周胰岛素信号之间的遗传重叠,扩展了以前的工作。我们对基于人群的费城神经发育队列(PNC,650 名儿童和青少年)中的总 OCS 评分和探索性因子分析的 22 个问题的六个 OCS 因子进行了全基因组关联研究(GWAS)。随后,我们进行了多基因风险评分(PRS)分析,以评估临床 OCD(使用精神病学基因组学联盟的 GWAS 数据)、总 OCS 评分和 OCS 因子之间的共同遗传病因。然后,我们进行了以一组与 CNS 胰岛素调节突触功能相关的 OCD 相关基因为中心的基因集分析和基于 PRS 的分析,用于五个与外周胰岛素信号相关的特征。为了验证目的,我们探索了独立的 Spit for Science 人群队列(5047 名儿童和青少年)的数据。在 PNC 中,我们发现 OCD 和“内疚禁忌思想”之间存在显著的共同遗传病因。在 Spit for Science 队列中,我们还观察到“对称/计数/排序”和“污染/清洁”之间的遗传共享。CNS 胰岛素相关基因集也与 PNC 中的“对称/计数/排序”相关。此外,我们确定了与外周胰岛素信号相关特征之间的遗传共享:2 型糖尿病与“攻击禁忌思想”,以及空腹胰岛素和 2 小时血糖与 OCD。总之,OCD、人群中的 OCS 和胰岛素相关特征共享遗传风险因素,表明躯体和精神障碍存在共同的发病机制。