Genetics of environmental sensitivity to psychiatric and neurodevelopmental phenotypes: evidence from GWAS of monozygotic twins.
Elham AssaryJonathan R I ColemanGibran HemaniMargot van Der VeijerLaurence J HoweTeemu PalviainenKatrina L GrasbyRafael AhlskogMarianne NygaardRosa CheesmanKai LimChandra ReynoldsJuan R OrdoñanaLucia Colodro-CondeScott D GordonJuan Madrid-ValeroAnbupalam ThalamuthuJouke- Jan HottengaJonas Mengel-FromNicola J ArmstrongPerminder Singh SachdevTeresa LeeHenry BrodatyJulian N TrollorMargaret J WrightDavid AmesVibeke CattsAntti LatvalaEero VuoksimaaTravis T MallardKathryn Paige HardenElliot M Tucker-DrobSven OskarssonChristopher J HammondKaare ChristensenMark TaylorSebastian LundströmHenrik LarssonRobert KarlssonNancy PedersenKaren A MatherSarah E MedlandDorret I BoomsmaNicholas G MartinRobert PlominMeike BartelsPaul LichtensteinJaakko A KaprioThalia C EleyNeil Martin DaviesPatricia B MunroeRobert KeersPublished in: Research square (2024)
Individual sensitivity to environmental exposures may be genetically influenced. This genotype-by-environment interplay implies differences in phenotypic variance across genotypes. However, environmental sensitivity genetic variants have proven challenging to detect. GWAS of monozygotic twin differences is a family-based variance analysis method, which is more robust to systemic biases that impact population-based methods. We combined data from up to 21,792 monozygotic twins (10,896 pairs) from 11 studies to conduct the largest GWAS meta-analysis of monozygotic phenotypic differences in children and adolescents/adults for seven psychiatric and neurodevelopmental phenotypes: attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) symptoms, autistic traits, anxiety and depression symptoms, psychotic-like experiences, neuroticism, and wellbeing. The SNP-heritability of variance in these phenotypes were estimated (h2: 0% to 18%), but were imprecise. We identified a total of 13 genome-wide significant associations (SNP, gene, and gene-set), including genes related to stress-reactivity for depression, growth factor-related genes for autistic traits and catecholamine uptake-related genes for psychotic-like experiences. Monozygotic twins are an important new source of evidence about the genetics of environmental sensitivity.