Muniz Carvalho Carolina, Wendt Frank R, Pathak Gita A, Maihofer Adam X, Stein Dan J, Sumner Jennifer A, Hemmings Sian M J, Nievergelt Caroline M, Koenen Karestan C, Gelernter Joel, Belangero Sintia I, Polimanti Renato
Department of Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine and VA CT Healthcare Center, West Haven, CT, 06516, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, Universidade Federal de São Paulo (UNIFESP), São Paulo, SP, Brazil.
Neurobiol Stress. 2021 Sep 17;15:100400. doi: 10.1016/j.ynstr.2021.100400. eCollection 2021 Nov.
There is a well-known association of traumatic experiences and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) with body size and composition, including consistent differences between sexes. However, the biology underlying these associations is unclear. To understand the genetic underpinnings of this complex relationship, we investigated genome-wide datasets informative of African and European ancestries from the Psychiatric Genomic Consortium, the UK Biobank, the GIANT Consortium, and the Million Veteran Program. We used genome-wide association statistics to estimate sex-specific genetic correlations ( ) of traumatic experiences, social support, and PTSD with multiple anthropometric traits. After multiple testing corrections (false discovery rate, FDR q < 0.05), we observed 58 significant relationships in females (e.g., childhood physical abuse and body mass index, BMI = 0.245, p = 3.88 × 10) and 21 significant relationships in males (e.g., been involved in combat or exposed to warzone and leg fat percentage; = 0.405, p = 4.42 × 10). We performed causal inference analyses of these genetic overlaps using Mendelian randomization and latent causal variable approaches. Multiple female-specific putative causal relationships were observed linking body composition/size with PTSD (e.g., leg fat percentage→PTSD; beta = 0.319, p = 3.13 × 10), traumatic experiences (e.g., childhood physical abuse→waist circumference; beta = 0.055, p = 5.07 × 10), and childhood neglect (e.g., "someone to take you to doctor when needed as a child"→BMI; beta = -0.594, p = 1.09 × 10). In males, we observed putative causal effects linking anthropometric-trait genetic liabilities to traumatic experiences (e.g., BMI→childhood physical abuse; beta = 0.028, p = 8.19 × 10). Some of these findings were replicated in individuals of African descent although the limited sample size available did not permit us to conduct a sex-stratified analysis in this ancestry group. In conclusion, our findings provide insights regarding sex-specific causal networks linking anthropometric traits to PTSD, traumatic experiences, and social support
创伤经历和创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)与身体大小和组成之间存在着一种广为人知的关联,包括性别之间的持续差异。然而,这些关联背后的生物学机制尚不清楚。为了理解这种复杂关系的遗传基础,我们研究了来自精神基因组学联盟、英国生物银行、GIANT联盟和百万退伍军人计划的、包含非洲和欧洲血统信息的全基因组数据集。我们使用全基因组关联统计来估计创伤经历、社会支持和PTSD与多种人体测量特征之间的性别特异性遗传相关性( )。经过多次检验校正(错误发现率,FDR q < 0.05),我们在女性中观察到58个显著的 关系(例如,童年身体虐待与体重指数,BMI = 0.245,p = 3.88 × 10),在男性中观察到21个显著的 关系(例如,参与战斗或暴露于战区与腿部脂肪百分比; = 0.405,p = 4.42 × 10)。我们使用孟德尔随机化和潜在因果变量方法对这些遗传重叠进行了因果推断分析。观察到多个女性特异性的假定因果关系,将身体组成/大小与PTSD(例如,腿部脂肪百分比→PTSD;β = 0.319,p = 3.13 × 10)、创伤经历(例如,童年身体虐待→腰围;β = 0.055,p = 5.07 × 10)和童年忽视(例如,“小时候生病有人带你去看医生”→BMI;β = -0.594,p = 1.09 × 10)联系起来。在男性中,我们观察到将人体测量特征遗传易感性与创伤经历联系起来的假定因果效应(例如,BMI→童年身体虐待;β = 0.028,p = 8.19 × 10)。尽管可用样本量有限,导致我们无法在这个血统群体中进行性别分层分析,但其中一些发现在非洲裔个体中得到了重复。总之,我们的研究结果为将人体测量特征与PTSD、创伤经历和社会支持联系起来的性别特异性因果网络提供了见解