Genome-wide association study of facial emotion recognition in children and association with polygenic risk for mental health disorders.
Jonathan R I ColemanKathryn J LesterRobert KeersMarcus R MunafòGerome BreenThalia C EleyPublished in: American journal of medical genetics. Part B, Neuropsychiatric genetics : the official publication of the International Society of Psychiatric Genetics (2017)
Emotion recognition is disrupted in many mental health disorders, which may reflect shared genetic aetiology between this trait and these disorders. We explored genetic influences on emotion recognition and the relationship between these influences and mental health phenotypes. Eight-year-old participants (n = 4,097) from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC) completed the Diagnostic Analysis of Non-Verbal Accuracy (DANVA) faces test. Genome-wide genotype data was available from the Illumina HumanHap550 Quad microarray. Genome-wide association studies were performed to assess associations with recognition of individual emotions and emotion in general. Exploratory polygenic risk scoring was performed using published genomic data for schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, depression, autism spectrum disorder, anorexia, and anxiety disorders. No individual genetic variants were identified at conventional levels of significance in any analysis although several loci were associated at a level suggestive of significance. SNP-chip heritability analyses did not identify a heritable component of variance for any phenotype. Polygenic scores were not associated with any phenotype. The effect sizes of variants influencing emotion recognition are likely to be small. Previous studies of emotion identification have yielded non-zero estimates of SNP-heritability. This discrepancy is likely due to differences in the measurement and analysis of the phenotype.
Keyphrases
- genome wide
- autism spectrum disorder
- mental health
- depressive symptoms
- copy number
- bipolar disorder
- dna methylation
- genome wide association study
- genome wide association
- intellectual disability
- borderline personality disorder
- attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
- young adults
- mental illness
- major depressive disorder
- big data
- electronic health record
- gene expression
- physical activity
- high density
- circulating tumor cells
- soft tissue