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Browsing by Author "Edwards, Alexis C."
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Item Clinical, environmental, and genetic risk factors for substance use disorders: characterizing combined effects across multiple cohorts(Springer, 2022-10-04) Barr, Peter B.; Driver, Morgan N.; Kuo, Sally I-Chun; Stephenson, Mallory; Aliev, Fazil; Linnér, Richard Karlsson; Marks, Jesse; Anokhin, Andrey P.; Bucholz, Kathleen; Chan, Grace; Edenberg, Howard J.; Edwards, Alexis C.; Francis, Meredith W.; Hancock, Dana B.; Harden, K. Paige; Kamarajan, Chella; Kaprio, Jaakko; Kinreich, Sivan; Kramer, John R.; Kuperman, Samuel; Latvala, Antti; Meyers, Jacquelyn L.; Palmer, Abraham A.; Plawecki, Martin H.; Porjesz, Bernice; Rose, Richard J.; Schuckit, Marc A.; Salvatore, Jessica E.; Dick , Danielle M.; Medical and Molecular Genetics, School of MedicineSubstance use disorders (SUDs) incur serious social and personal costs. The risk for SUDs is complex, with risk factors ranging from social conditions to individual genetic variation. We examined whether models that include a clinical/environmental risk index (CERI) and polygenic scores (PGS) are able to identify individuals at increased risk of SUD in young adulthood across four longitudinal cohorts for a combined sample of N = 15,134. Our analyses included participants of European (NEUR = 12,659) and African (NAFR = 2475) ancestries. SUD outcomes included: (1) alcohol dependence, (2) nicotine dependence; (3) drug dependence, and (4) any substance dependence. In the models containing the PGS and CERI, the CERI was associated with all three outcomes (ORs = 01.37-1.67). PGS for problematic alcohol use, externalizing, and smoking quantity were associated with alcohol dependence, drug dependence, and nicotine dependence, respectively (OR = 1.11-1.33). PGS for problematic alcohol use and externalizing were also associated with any substance dependence (ORs = 1.09-1.18). The full model explained 6-13% of the variance in SUDs. Those in the top 10% of CERI and PGS had relative risk ratios of 3.86-8.04 for each SUD relative to the bottom 90%. Overall, the combined measures of clinical, environmental, and genetic risk demonstrated modest ability to distinguish between affected and unaffected individuals in young adulthood. PGS were significant but added little in addition to the clinical/environmental risk index. Results from our analysis demonstrate there is still considerable work to be done before tools such as these are ready for clinical applications.Item Dissecting the Shared Genetic Architecture of Suicide Attempt, Psychiatric Disorders, and Known Risk Factors(Elsevier, 2022-02-01) Mullins, Niamh; Kang, JooEun; Campos, Adrian I.; Coleman, Jonathan R. I.; Edwards, Alexis C.; Galfalvy, Hanga; Levey, Daniel F.; Lori, Adriana; Shabalin, Andrey; Starnawska, Anna; Su, Mei-Hsin; Watson, Hunna J.; Adams, Mark; Awasthi, Swapnil; Gandal, Michael; Hafferty, Jonathan D.; Hishimoto, Akitoyo; Kim, Minsoo; Okazaki, Satoshi; Otsuka, Ikuo; Ripke, Stephan; Ware, Erin B.; Bergen, Andrew W.; Berrettini, Wade H.; Bohus, Martin; Brandt, Harry; Chang, Xiao; Chen, Wei J.; Chen, Hsi-Chung; Crawford, Steven; Crow, Scott; DiBlasi, Emily; Duriez, Philibert; Fernández-Aranda, Fernando; Fichter, Manfred M.; Gallinger, Steven; Glatt, Stephen J.; Gorwood, Philip; Guo, Yiran; Hakonarson, Hakon; Halmi, Katherine A.; Hwu, Hai-Gwo; Jain, Sonia; Jamain, Stéphane; Jiménez-Murcia, Susana; Johnson, Craig; Kaplan, Allan S.; Kaye, Walter H.; Keel, Pamela K.; Kennedy, James L.; Klump, Kelly L.; Li, Dong; Liao, Shih-Cheng; Lieb, Klaus; Lilenfeld, Lisa; Liu, Chih-Min; Magistretti, Pierre J.; Marshall, Christian R.; Mitchell, James E.; Monson, Eric T.; Myers, Richard M.; Pinto, Dalila; Powers, Abigail; Ramoz, Nicolas; Roepke, Stefan; Rozanov, Vsevolod; Scherer, Stephen W.; Schmahl, Christian; Sokolowski, Marcus; Strober, Michael; Thornton, Laura M.; Treasure, Janet; Tsuang, Ming T.; Witt, Stephanie H.; Woodside, D. Blake; Yilmaz, Zeynep; Zillich, Lea; Adolfsson, Rolf; Agartz, Ingrid; Air, Tracy M.; Alda, Martin; Alfredsson, Lars; Andreassen, Ole A.; Anjorin, Adebayo; Appadurai, Vivek; Artigas, María Soler; Van der Auwera, Sandra; Azevedo, M. Helena; Bass, Nicholas; Bau, Claiton H. D.; Baune, Bernhard T.; Bellivier, Frank; Berger, Klaus; Biernacka, Joanna M.; Bigdeli, Tim B.; Binder, Elisabeth B.; Boehnke, Michael; Boks, Marco P.; Bosch, Rosa; Braff, David L.; Bryant, Richard; Budde, Monika; Byrne, Enda M.; Cahn, Wiepke; Casas, Miguel; Castelao, Enrique; Cervilla, Jorge A.; Chaumette, Boris; Cichon, Sven; Corvin, Aiden; Craddock, Nicholas; Craig, David; Degenhardt, Franziska; Djurovic, Srdjan; Edenberg, Howard J.; Fanous, Ayman H.; Foo, Jerome C.; Forstner, Andreas J.; Frye, Mark; Fullerton, Janice M.; Gatt, Justine M.; Gejman, Pablo V.; Giegling, Ina; Grabe, Hans J.; Green, Melissa J.; Grevet, Eugenio H.; Grigoroiu-Serbanescu, Maria; Gutierrez, Blanca; Guzman-Parra, Jose; Hamilton, Steven P.; Hamshere, Marian L.; Hartmann, Annette; Hauser, Joanna; Heilmann-Heimbach, Stefanie; Hoffmann, Per; Ising, Marcus; Jones, Ian; Jones, Lisa A.; Jonsson, Lina; Kahn, René S.; Kelsoe, John R.; Kendler, Kenneth S.; Kloiber, Stefan; Koenen, Karestan C.; Kogevinas, Manolis; Konte, Bettina; Krebs, Marie-Odile; Landén, Mikael; Lawrence, Jacob; Leboyer, Marion; Lee, Phil H.; Levinson, Douglas F.; Liao, Calwing; Lissowska, Jolanta; Lucae, Susanne; Mayoral, Fermin; McElroy, Susan L.; McGrath, Patrick; McGuffin, Peter; McQuillin, Andrew; Medland, Sarah E.; Mehta, Divya; Melle, Ingrid; Milaneschi, Yuri; Mitchell, Philip B.; Molina, Esther; Morken, Gunnar; Mortensen, Preben Bo; Müller-Myhsok, Bertram; Nievergelt, Caroline; Nimgaonkar, Vishwajit; Nöthen, Markus M.; O’Donovan, Michael C.; Ophoff, Roel A.; Owen, Michael J.; Pato, Carlos; Pato, Michele T.; Penninx, Brenda W. J. H.; Pimm, Jonathan; Pistis, Giorgio; Potash, James B.; Power, Robert A.; Preisig, Martin; Quested, Digby; Ramos-Quiroga, Josep Antoni; Reif, Andreas; Ribasés , Marta; Richarte, Vanesa; Rietschel, Marcella; Rivera, Margarita; Roberts, Andrea; Roberts, Gloria; Rouleau, Guy A.; Rovaris, Diego L.; Rujescu, Dan; Sánchez-Mora, Cristina; Sanders, Alan R.; Schofield, Peter R.; Schulze, Thomas G.; Scott, Laura J.; Serretti, Alessandro; Shi, Jianxin; Shyn, Stanley I.; Sirignano, Lea; Sklar, Pamela; Smeland, Olav B.; Smoller, Jordan W.; Sonuga-Barke, Edmund J. S.; Spalletta, Gianfranco; Strauss, John S.; Świątkowska, Beata; Trzaskowski, Maciej; Turecki, Gustavo; Vilar-Ribó, Laura; Vincent, John B.; Völzke, Henry; Walters, James T. R.; Weickert, Cynthia Shannon; Weickert, Thomas W.; Weissman, Myrna M.; Williams, Leanne M.; Wray, Naomi R.; Zai, Clement C.; Ashley-Koch, Allison E.; Beckham, Jean C.; Hauser, Elizabeth R.; Hauser, Michael A.; Kimbrel, Nathan A.; Lindquist, Jennifer H.; McMahon, Benjamin; Oslin, David W.; Qin, Xuejun; Major Depressive Disorder Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium; Bipolar Disorder Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium; Eating Disorders Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium; German Borderline Genomics Consortium; MVP Suicide Exemplar Workgroup; VA Million Veteran Program; Medical and Molecular Genetics, School of MedicineBACKGROUND: Suicide is a leading cause of death worldwide, and nonfatal suicide attempts, which occur far more frequently, are a major source of disability and social and economic burden. Both have substantial genetic etiology, which is partially shared and partially distinct from that of related psychiatric disorders. METHODS: We conducted a genome-wide association study (GWAS) of 29,782 suicide attempt (SA) cases and 519,961 controls in the International Suicide Genetics Consortium (ISGC). The GWAS of SA was conditioned on psychiatric disorders using GWAS summary statistics via multitrait-based conditional and joint analysis, to remove genetic effects on SA mediated by psychiatric disorders. We investigated the shared and divergent genetic architectures of SA, psychiatric disorders, and other known risk factors. RESULTS: Two loci reached genome-wide significance for SA: the major histocompatibility complex and an intergenic locus on chromosome 7, the latter of which remained associated with SA after conditioning on psychiatric disorders and replicated in an independent cohort from the Million Veteran Program. This locus has been implicated in risk-taking behavior, smoking, and insomnia. SA showed strong genetic correlation with psychiatric disorders, particularly major depression, and also with smoking, pain, risk-taking behavior, sleep disturbances, lower educational attainment, reproductive traits, lower socioeconomic status, and poorer general health. After conditioning on psychiatric disorders, the genetic correlations between SA and psychiatric disorders decreased, whereas those with nonpsychiatric traits remained largely unchanged. CONCLUSIONS: Our results identify a risk locus that contributes more strongly to SA than other phenotypes and suggest a shared underlying biology between SA and known risk factors that is not mediated by psychiatric disorders.Item Evidence of causal effect of major depression on alcohol dependence: findings from the psychiatric genomics consortium(Cambridge University Press, 2019-05) Polimanti, Renato; Peterson, Roseann E.; Ong, Jue-Sheng; MacGregor, Stuart; Edwards, Alexis C.; Clarke, Toni-Kim; Frank, Josef; Gerring, Zachary; Gillespie, Nathan A.; Lind, Penelope A.; Maes, Hermine H.; Martin, Nicholas G.; Mbarek, Hamdi; Medland, Sarah E.; Streit, Fabian; Agrawal, Arpana; Edenberg, Howard J.; Kendler, Kenneth S.; Lewis, Cathryn M.; Sullivan, Patrick F.; Wray, Naomi R.; Gelernter, Joel; Derks, Eske M.; Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, School of MedicineBACKGROUND: Despite established clinical associations among major depression (MD), alcohol dependence (AD), and alcohol consumption (AC), the nature of the causal relationship between them is not completely understood. We leveraged genome-wide data from the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium (PGC) and UK Biobank to test for the presence of shared genetic mechanisms and causal relationships among MD, AD, and AC. METHODS: Linkage disequilibrium score regression and Mendelian randomization (MR) were performed using genome-wide data from the PGC (MD: 135 458 cases and 344 901 controls; AD: 10 206 cases and 28 480 controls) and UK Biobank (AC-frequency: 438 308 individuals; AC-quantity: 307 098 individuals). RESULTS: Positive genetic correlation was observed between MD and AD (rgMD-AD = + 0.47, P = 6.6 × 10-10). AC-quantity showed positive genetic correlation with both AD (rgAD-AC quantity = + 0.75, P = 1.8 × 10-14) and MD (rgMD-AC quantity = + 0.14, P = 2.9 × 10-7), while there was negative correlation of AC-frequency with MD (rgMD-AC frequency = -0.17, P = 1.5 × 10-10) and a non-significant result with AD. MR analyses confirmed the presence of pleiotropy among these four traits. However, the MD-AD results reflect a mediated-pleiotropy mechanism (i.e. causal relationship) with an effect of MD on AD (beta = 0.28, P = 1.29 × 10-6). There was no evidence for reverse causation. CONCLUSION: This study supports a causal role for genetic liability of MD on AD based on genetic datasets including thousands of individuals. Understanding mechanisms underlying MD-AD comorbidity addresses important public health concerns and has the potential to facilitate prevention and intervention efforts.Item Genome-wide Association Studies in Ancestrally Diverse Populations: Opportunities, Methods, Pitfalls, and Recommendations(Elsevier, 2019-10-10) Peterson, Roseann E.; Kuchenbaecker, Karoline; Walters, Raymond K.; Chen, Chia-Yen; Popejoy, Alice B.; Periyasamy, Sathish; Lam, Max; Iyegbe, Conrad; Strawbridge, Rona J.; Brick, Leslie; Carey, Caitlin E.; Martin, Alicia R.; Meyers, Jacquelyn L.; Su, Jinni; Chen, Junfang; Edwards, Alexis C.; Kalungi, Allan; Koen, Nastassja; Majara, Lerato; Schwarz, Emanuel; Smoller, Jordan W.; Stahl, Eli A.; Sullivan, Patrick F.; Vassos, Evangelos; Mowry, Bryan; Prieto, Miguel L.; Cuellar-Barboza, Alfredo; Bigdeli, Tim B.; Edenberg, Howard J.; Huang, Hailiang; Duncan, Laramie E.; Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, School of MedicineGenome-wide association studies (GWAS) have focused primarily on populations of European descent, but it is essential that diverse populations become better represented. Increasing diversity among study participants will advance our understanding of genetic architecture in all populations and ensure that genetic research is broadly applicable. To facilitate and promote research in multi-ancestry and admixed cohorts, we outline key methodological considerations and highlight opportunities, challenges, solutions, and areas in need of development. Despite the perception that analyzing genetic data from diverse populations is difficult, it is scientifically and ethically imperative, and there is an expanding analytical toolbox to do it well.Item GWAS Meta-Analysis of Suicide Attempt: Identification of 12 Genome-Wide Significant Loci and Implication of Genetic Risks for Specific Health Factors(American Psychiatric Association, 2023) Docherty, Anna R.; Mullins, Niamh; Ashley-Koch, Allison E.; Qin, Xuejun; Coleman, Jonathan R. I.; Shabalin, Andrey; Kang, JooEun; Murnyak, Balasz; Wendt, Frank; Adams, Mark; Campos, Adrian I.; DiBlasi, Emily; Fullerton, Janice M.; Kranzler, Henry R.; Bakian, Amanda V.; Monson, Eric T.; Rentería, Miguel E.; Walss-Bass, Consuelo; Andreassen, Ole A.; Behera, Chittaranjan; Bulik, Cynthia M.; Edenberg, Howard J.; Kessler, Ronald C.; Mann, J. John; Nurnberger, John I., Jr.; Pistis, Giorgio; Streit, Fabian; Ursano, Robert J.; Polimanti, Renato; Dennis, Michelle; Garrett, Melanie; Hair, Lauren; Harvey, Philip; Hauser, Elizabeth R.; Hauser, Michael A.; Huffman, Jennifer; Jacobson, Daniel; Madduri, Ravi; McMahon, Benjamin; Oslin, David W.; Trafton, Jodie; Awasthi, Swapnil; Berrettini, Wade H.; Bohus, Martin; Chang, Xiao; Chen, Hsi-Chung; Chen, Wei J.; Christensen, Erik D.; Crow, Scott; Duriez, Philibert; Edwards, Alexis C.; Fernández-Aranda, Fernando; Galfalvy, Hanga; Gandal, Michael; Gorwood, Philip; Guo, Yiran; Hafferty, Jonathan D.; Hakonarson, Hakon; Halmi, Katherine A.; Hishimoto, Akitoyo; Jain, Sonia; Jamain, Stéphane; Jiménez-Murcia, Susana; Johnson, Craig; Kaplan, Allan S.; Kaye, Walter H.; Keel, Pamela K.; Kennedy, James L.; Kim, Minsoo; Klump, Kelly L.; Levey, Daniel F.; Li, Dong; Liao, Shih-Cheng; Lieb, Klaus; Lilenfeld, Lisa; Marshall, Christian R.; Mitchell, James E.; Okazaki, Satoshi; Otsuka, Ikuo; Pinto, Dalila; Powers, Abigail; Ramoz, Nicolas; Ripke, Stephan; Roepke, Stefan; Rozanov, Vsevolod; Scherer, Stephen W.; Schmahl, Christian; Sokolowski, Marcus; Starnawska, Anna; Strober, Michael; Su, Mei-Hsin; Thornton, Laura M.; Treasure, Janet; Ware, Erin B.; Watson, Hunna J.; Witt, Stephanie H.; Woodside, D. Blake; Yilmaz, Zeynep; Zillich, Lea; Adolfsson, Rolf; Agartz, Ingrid; Alda, Martin; Alfredsson, Lars; Appadurai, Vivek; Artigas, María Soler; Van der Auwera, Sandra; Azevedo, M. Helena; Bass, Nicholas; Bau, Claiton H. D.; Baune, Bernhard T.; Bellivier, Frank; Berger, Klaus; Biernacka, Joanna M.; Bigdeli, Tim B.; Binder, Elisabeth B.; Boehnke, Michael; Boks, Marco P.; Braff, David L.; Bryant, Richard; Budde, Monika; Byrne, Enda M.; Cahn, Wiepke; Castelao, Enrique; Cervilla, Jorge A.; Chaumette, Boris; Corvin, Aiden; Craddock, Nicholas; Djurovic, Srdjan; Foo, Jerome C.; Forstner, Andreas J.; Frye, Mark; Gatt, Justine M.; Giegling, Ina; Grabe, Hans J.; Green, Melissa J.; Grevet, Eugenio H.; Grigoroiu-Serbanescu, Maria; Gutierrez, Blanca; Guzman-Parra, Jose; Hamshere, Marian L.; Hartmann, Annette M.; Hauser, Joanna; Heilmann-Heimbach, Stefanie; Hoffmann, Per; Ising, Marcus; Jones, Ian; Jones, Lisa A.; Jonsson, Lina; Kahn, René S.; Kelsoe, John R.; Kendler, Kenneth S.; Kloiber, Stefan; Koenen, Karestan C.; Kogevinas, Manolis; Krebs, Marie-Odile; Landén, Mikael; Leboyer, Marion; Lee, Phil H.; Levinson, Douglas F.; Liao, Calwing; Lissowska, Jolanta; Mayoral, Fermin; McElroy, Susan L.; McGrath, Patrick; McGuffin, Peter; McQuillin, Andrew; Mehta, Divya; Melle, Ingrid; Mitchell, Philip B.; Molina, Esther; Morken, Gunnar; Nievergelt, Caroline; Nöthen, Markus M.; O'Donovan, Michael C.; Ophoff, Roel A.; Owen, Michael J.; Pato, Carlos; Pato, Michele T.; Penninx, Brenda W. J. H.; Potash, James B.; Power, Robert A.; Preisig, Martin; Quested, Digby; Ramos-Quiroga, Josep Antoni; Reif, Andreas; Ribasés, Marta; Richarte, Vanesa; Rietschel, Marcella; Rivera, Margarita; Roberts, Andrea; Roberts, Gloria; Rouleau, Guy A.; Rovaris, Diego L.; Sanders, Alan R.; Schofield, Peter R.; Schulze, Thomas G.; Scott, Laura J.; Serretti, Alessandro; Shi, Jianxin; Sirignano, Lea; Sklar, Pamela; Smeland, Olav B.; Smoller, Jordan W.; Sonuga-Barke, Edmund J. S.; Trzaskowski, Maciej; Tsuang, Ming T.; Turecki, Gustavo; Vilar-Ribó, Laura; Vincent, John B.; Völzke, Henry; Walters, James T. R.; Weickert, Cynthia Shannon; Weickert, Thomas W.; Weissman, Myrna M.; Williams, Leanne M.; Wray, Naomi R.; Zai, Clement C.; Agerbo, Esben; Børglum, Anders D.; Breen, Gerome; Demontis, Ditte; Erlangsen, Annette; Gelernter, Joel; Glatt, Stephen J.; Hougaard, David M.; Hwu, Hai-Gwo; Kuo, Po-Hsiu; Lewis, Cathryn M.; Li, Qingqin S.; Liu, Chih-Min; Martin, Nicholas G.; McIntosh, Andrew M.; Medland, Sarah E.; Mors, Ole; Nordentoft, Merete; Olsen, Catherine M.; Porteous, David; Smith, Daniel J.; Stahl, Eli A.; Stein, Murray B.; Wasserman, Danuta; Werge, Thomas; Whiteman, David C.; Willour, Virginia; VA Million Veteran Program (MVP); MVP Suicide Exemplar Workgroup; Suicide Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium; Major Depressive Disorder Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium; Bipolar Disorder Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium; Schizophrenia Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium; Eating Disorder Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium; German Borderline Genomics Consortium; Coon, Hilary; Beckham, Jean C.; Kimbrel, Nathan A.; Ruderfer, Douglas M.; Psychiatry, School of MedicineObjective: Suicidal behavior is heritable and is a major cause of death worldwide. Two large-scale genome-wide association studies (GWASs) recently discovered and cross-validated genome-wide significant (GWS) loci for suicide attempt (SA). The present study leveraged the genetic cohorts from both studies to conduct the largest GWAS meta-analysis of SA to date. Multi-ancestry and admixture-specific meta-analyses were conducted within groups of significant African, East Asian, and European ancestry admixtures. Methods: This study comprised 22 cohorts, including 43,871 SA cases and 915,025 ancestry-matched controls. Analytical methods across multi-ancestry and individual ancestry admixtures included inverse variance-weighted fixed-effects meta-analyses, followed by gene, gene-set, tissue-set, and drug-target enrichment, as well as summary-data-based Mendelian randomization with brain expression quantitative trait loci data, phenome-wide genetic correlation, and genetic causal proportion analyses. Results: Multi-ancestry and European ancestry admixture GWAS meta-analyses identified 12 risk loci at p values <5×10-8. These loci were mostly intergenic and implicated DRD2, SLC6A9, FURIN, NLGN1, SOX5, PDE4B, and CACNG2. The multi-ancestry SNP-based heritability estimate of SA was 5.7% on the liability scale (SE=0.003, p=5.7×10-80). Significant brain tissue gene expression and drug set enrichment were observed. There was shared genetic variation of SA with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, smoking, and risk tolerance after conditioning SA on both major depressive disorder and posttraumatic stress disorder. Genetic causal proportion analyses implicated shared genetic risk for specific health factors. Conclusions: This multi-ancestry analysis of suicide attempt identified several loci contributing to risk and establishes significant shared genetic covariation with clinical phenotypes. These findings provide insight into genetic factors associated with suicide attempt across ancestry admixture populations, in veteran and civilian populations, and in attempt versus death.Item Item-Level Genome-Wide Association Study of the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test in Three Population-Based Cohorts(American Psychiatric Association, 2022) Mallard, Travis T.; Savage, Jeanne E.; Johnson, Emma C.; Huang, Yuye; Edwards, Alexis C.; Hottenga, Jouke J.; Grotzinger, Andrew D.; Gustavson, Daniel E.; Jennings, Mariela V.; Anokhin, Andrey; Dick, Danielle M.; Edenberg, Howard J.; Kramer, John R.; Lai, Dongbing; Meyers, Jacquelyn L.; Pandey, Ashwini K.; Harden, Kathryn Paige; Nivard, Michel G.; de Geus, Eco J. C.; Boomsma, Dorret I.; Agrawal, Arpana; Davis, Lea K.; Clarke, Toni-Kim; Palmer, Abraham A.; Sanchez-Roige, Sandra; Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, School of MedicineObjective: Genome-wide association studies (GWASs) of the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT), a 10-item screen for alcohol use disorder (AUD), have elucidated novel loci for alcohol consumption and misuse. However, these studies also revealed that GWASs can be influenced by numerous biases (e.g., measurement error, selection bias), which may have led to inconsistent genetic correlations between alcohol involvement and AUD, as well as paradoxically negative genetic correlations between alcohol involvement and psychiatric disorders and/or medical conditions. The authors used genomic structural equation modeling to elucidate the genetics of alcohol consumption and problematic consequences of alcohol use as measured by AUDIT. Methods: To explore these unexpected differences in genetic correlations, the authors conducted the first item-level and the largest GWAS of AUDIT items (N=160,824) and applied a multivariate framework to mitigate previous biases. Results: The authors identified novel patterns of similarity (and dissimilarity) among the AUDIT items and found evidence of a correlated two-factor structure at the genetic level ("consumption" and "problems," rg=0.80). Moreover, by applying empirically derived weights to each of the AUDIT items, the authors constructed an aggregate measure of alcohol consumption that was strongly associated with alcohol dependence (rg=0.67), moderately associated with several other psychiatric disorders, and no longer positively associated with health and positive socioeconomic outcomes. Lastly, by conducting polygenic analyses in three independent cohorts that differed in their ascertainment and prevalence of AUD, the authors identified novel genetic associations between alcohol consumption, alcohol misuse, and health. Conclusions: This work further emphasizes the value of AUDIT for both clinical and genetic studies of AUD and the importance of using multivariate methods to study genetic associations that are more closely related to AUD.Item Polygenic contributions to alcohol use and alcohol use disorders across population-based and clinically ascertained samples(Cambridge University Press, 2021) Johnson, Emma C.; Sanchez-Roige, Sandra; Acion, Laura; Adams, Mark J.; Bucholz, Kathleen K.; Chan, Grace; Chao, Michael J.; Chorlian, David B.; Dick, Danielle M.; Edenberg, Howard J.; Foroud, Tatiana; Hayward, Caroline; Heron, Jon; Hesselbrock, Victor; Hickman, Matthew; Kendler, Kenneth S.; Kinreich, Sivan; Kramer, John; Kuo, Sally I-Chun; Kuperman, Samuel; Lai, Dongbing; McIntosh, Andrew M.; Meyers, Jacquelyn L.; Plawecki, Martin H.; Porjesz, Bernice; Porteous, David; Schuckit, Marc A.; Su, Jinni; Zang, Yong; Palmer, Abraham A.; Agrawal, Arpana; Clarke, Toni-Kim; Edwards, Alexis C.; Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, School of MedicineBackground: Studies suggest that alcohol consumption and alcohol use disorders have distinct genetic backgrounds. Methods: We examined whether polygenic risk scores (PRS) for consumption and problem subscales of the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT-C, AUDIT-P) in the UK Biobank (UKB; N = 121 630) correlate with alcohol outcomes in four independent samples: an ascertained cohort, the Collaborative Study on the Genetics of Alcoholism (COGA; N = 6850), and population-based cohorts: Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC; N = 5911), Generation Scotland (GS; N = 17 461), and an independent subset of UKB (N = 245 947). Regression models and survival analyses tested whether the PRS were associated with the alcohol-related outcomes. Results: In COGA, AUDIT-P PRS was associated with alcohol dependence, AUD symptom count, maximum drinks (R2 = 0.47-0.68%, p = 2.0 × 10-8-1.0 × 10-10), and increased likelihood of onset of alcohol dependence (hazard ratio = 1.15, p = 4.7 × 10-8); AUDIT-C PRS was not an independent predictor of any phenotype. In ALSPAC, the AUDIT-C PRS was associated with alcohol dependence (R2 = 0.96%, p = 4.8 × 10-6). In GS, AUDIT-C PRS was a better predictor of weekly alcohol use (R2 = 0.27%, p = 5.5 × 10-11), while AUDIT-P PRS was more associated with problem drinking (R2 = 0.40%, p = 9.0 × 10-7). Lastly, AUDIT-P PRS was associated with ICD-based alcohol-related disorders in the UKB subset (R2 = 0.18%, p < 2.0 × 10-16). Conclusions: AUDIT-P PRS was associated with a range of alcohol-related phenotypes across population-based and ascertained cohorts, while AUDIT-C PRS showed less utility in the ascertained cohort. We show that AUDIT-P is genetically correlated with both use and misuse and demonstrate the influence of ascertainment schemes on PRS analyses.Item Shared Genetic Risk between Eating Disorder and Substance Use-Related Phenotypes: Evidence from Genome-Wide Association Studies(Wiley, 2021) Munn-Chernoff, Melissa A.; Johnson, Emma C.; Chou, Yi-Ling; Coleman, Jonathan R.I.; Thornton, Laura M.; Walters, Raymond K.; Yilmaz, Zeynep; Baker, Jessica H.; Hübel, Christopher; Gordon, Scott; Medland, Sarah E.; Watson, Hunna J.; Gaspar, Héléna A.; Bryois, Julien; Hinney, Anke; Leppä, Virpi M.; Mattheisen, Manuel; Ripke, Stephan; Yao, Shuyang; Giusti-Rodríguez, Paola; Hanscombe, Ken B.; Adan, Roger A.H.; Alfredsson, Lars; Ando, Tetsuya; Andreassen, Ole A.; Berrettini, Wade H.; Boehm, Ilka; Boni, Claudette; Perica, Vesna Boraska; Buehren, Katharina; Burghardt, Roland; Cassina, Matgteo; Cichon, Sven; Clementi, Maurizio; Cone, Roger D.; Courtet, Philippe; Crow, Scott; Crowley, James J.; Danner, Unna N.; Davis, Oliver S.P.; de Zwaan, Martina; Dedoussis, George; Degortes, Daniela; DeSocio, Janiece E.; Dick, Danielle M.; Dikeos, Dimitris; Dina, Christian; Dmitrzak-Weglarz, Monika; Docampo, Elisa; Duncan, Laramie E.; Egberts, Karin; Ehrlich, Stefan; Escaramís, Geòrgia; Esko, Tõnu; Estivill, Xavier; Farmer, Anne; Favaro, Angela; Fernández-Aranda, Fernando; Fichter, Manfred M.; Fischer, Krista; Föcker, Manuel; Foretova, Lenka; Forstner, Andreas J.; Forzan, Monica; Franklin, Christopher S.; Gallinger, Steven; Giegling, Ina; Giuranna, Johanna; Gonidakis, Fragiskos; Gorwood, Philip; Gratacos Mayora, Monica; Guillaume, Sébastien; Guo, Yiran; Hakonarson, Hakon; Hatzikotoulas, Konstantinos; Hauser, Joanna; Hebebrand, Johannes; Helder, Sietske G.; Herms, Stefan; Herpertz-Dahlmann, Beate; Herzog, Wolfgang; Huckins, Laura M.; Hudson, James I.; Imgart, Hartmut; Inoko, Hidetoshi; Janout, Vladimir; Jiménez-Murcia, Susana; Julià, Antonio; Kalsi, Gursharan; Kaminská, Deborah; Karhunen, Leila; Karwautz, Andreas; Kas, Martien J.H.; Kennedy, James L.; Keski-Rahkonen, Anna; Kiezebrink, Kirsty; Kim, Youl-Ri; Klump, Kelly L.; Knudsen, Gun Peggy S.; La Via, Maria C.; Le Hellard, Stephanie; Levitan, Robert D.; Li, Dong; Lilenfeld, Lisa; Lin, Bochao Danae; Lissowska, Jolanta; Luykx, Jurjen; Magistretti, Pierre J.; Maj, Mario; Mannik, Katrin; Marsal, Sara; Marshall, Christian R.; Mattingsdal, Morten; McDevitt, Sara; McGuffin, Peter; Metspalu, Andres; Meulenbelt, Ingrid; Micali, Nadia; Mitchell, Karen; Monteleone, Alessio Maria; Monteleone, Palmiero; Nacmias, Benedetta; Navratilova, Marie; Ntalla, Ioanna; O’Toole, Julie K.; Ophoff, Roel A.; Padyukov, Leonid; Palotie, Aarno; Pantel, Jacques; Papezova, Hana; Pinto, Dalila; Rabionet, Raquel; Raevuori, Anu; Ramoz, Nicolas; Reichborn-Kjennerud, Ted; Ricca, Valdo; Ripatti, Samuli; Ritschel, Franziska; Roberts, Marion; Rotondo, Alessandro; Rujescu, Dan; Rybakowski, Filip; Santonastaso, Paolo; Scherag, André; Scherer, Stephen W.; Schmidt, Ulrike; Schork, Nicholas J.; Schosser, Alexandra; Seitz, Jochen; Slachtova, Lenka; Slagboom, P. Eline; Slof-Op’t Landt, Margarita C.T.; Slopien, Agnieszka; Sorbi, Sandro; Świątkowska, Beata; Szatkiewicz, Jin P.; Tachmazidou, Ioanna; Tenconi, Elena; Tortorella, Alfonso; Tozzi, Federica; Treasure, Janet; Tsitsika, Artemis; Tyszkiewicz-Nwafor, Marta; Tziouvas, Konstantinos; van Elburg, Annemarie A.; van Furth, Eric F.; Wagner, Gudrun; Walton, Esther; Widen, Elisabeth; Zeggini, Eleftheria; Zerwas, Stephanie; Zipfel, Stephan; Bergen, Andrew W.; Boden, Joseph M.; Brandt, Harry; Crawford, Steven; Halmi, Katherine A.; Horwood, L. John; Johnson, Craig; Kaplan, Allan S.; Kaye, Walter H.; Mitchell, James; Olsen, Catherine M.; Pearson, John F.; Pedersen, Nancy L.; Strober, Michael; Werge, Thomas; Whiteman, David C.; Woodside, D. Blake; Stuber, Garret D.; Grove, Jakob; Henders, Anjali K.; Larsen, Janne T.; Parker, Richard; Petersen, Liselotte V.; Jordan, Jennifer; Kennedy, Martin A.; Birgegård, Andreas; Lichtenstein, Paul; Norring, Claes; Landén, Mikael; Mortensen, Preben Bo; Polimanti, Renato; McClintick, Jeanette N.; Adams, Mark J.; Adkins, Amy E.; Aliev, Fazil; Bacanu, Silviu-Alin; Batzler, Anthony; Bertelsen, Sarah; Biernacka, Joanna M.; Bigdeli, Tim B.; Chen, Li-Shiun; Clarke, Toni-Kim; Degenhardt, Franziska; Docherty, Anna R.; Edwards, Alexis C.; Foo, Jerome C.; Fox, Louis; Frank, Josef; Hack, Laura M.; Hartmann, Annette M.; Hartz, Sarah M.; Heilmann-Heimbach, Stefanie; Hodgkinson, Colin; Hoffmann, Per; Hottenga, Jouke-Jan; Konte, Bettina; Lahti, Jari; Lahti-Pulkkinen, Marius; Lai, Dongbing; Ligthart, Lannie; Loukola, Anu; Maher, Marion S.; Mbarek, Hamdi; McIntosh, Andrew M.; McQueen, Matthew B.; Meyers, Jacquelyn L.; Milaneschi, Yuri; Palviainen, Teemu; Peterson, Roseann E.; Ryu, Euijung; Saccone, Nancy L.; Salvatore, Jessica E.; Sanchez-Roige, Sandra; Schwandt, Melanie; Sherva, Richard; Streit, Fabian; Strohmaier, Jana; Thomas, Nathaniel; Wang, Jen-Chyong; Webb, Bradley T.; Wedow, Robbee; Wetherill, Leah; Wills, Amanda G.; Zhou, Hang; Boardman, Jason D.; Chen, Danfeng; Choi, Doo-Sup; Copeland, William E.; Culverhouse, Robert C.; Dahmen, Norbert; Degenhardt, Louisa; Domingue, Benjamin W.; Frye, Mark A.; Gäbel, Wolfgang; Hayward, Caroline; Ising, Marcus; Keyes, Margaret; Kiefer, Falk; Koller, Gabrielle; Kramer, John; Kuperman, Samuel; Lucae, Susanne; Lynskey, Michael T.; Maier, Wolfgang; Mann, Karl; Männistö, Satu; Müller-Myhsok, Bertram; Murray, Alison D.; Nurnberger, John I.; Preuss, Ulrich; Räikkönen, Katri; Reynolds, Maureen D.; Ridinger, Monika; Scherbaum, Norbert; Schuckit, Marc A.; Soyka, Michael; Treutlein, Jens; Witt, Stephanie H.; Wodarz, Norbert; Zill, Peter; Adkins, Daniel E.; Boomsma, Dorret I.; Bierut, Laura J.; Brown, Sandra A.; Bucholz, Kathleen K.; Costello, E. Jane; de Wit, Harriet; Diazgranados, Nancy; Eriksson, Johan G.; Farrer, Lindsay A.; Foroud, Tatiana M.; Gillespie, Nathan A.; Goate, Alison M.; Goldman, David; Grucza, Richard A.; Hancock, Dana B.; Mullan Harris, Kathleen; Hesselbrock, Victor; Hewitt, John K.; Hopfer, Christian; Iacono, William G.; Johnson, Eric O.; Karpyak, Victor M.; Kendler, Kenneth S.; Kranzler, Henry R.; Krauter, Kenneth; Lind, Penelope A.; McGue, Matt; MacKillop, James; Madden, Pamela A.F.; Maes, Hermine H.; Magnusson, Patrik K.E.; Nelson, Elliot C.; Nöthen, Markus M.; Palmer, Abraham A.; Penninx, Brenda W.J.H.; Porjesz, Bernice; Rice, John P.; Rietschel, Marcella; Riley, Brien P.; Rose, Richard J.; Shen, Pei-Hong; Silberg, Judy; Stallings, Michael C.; Tarter, Ralph E.; Vanyukov, Michael M.; Vrieze, Scott; Wall, Tamara L.; Whitfield, John B.; Zhao, Hongyu; Neale, Benjamin M.; Wade, Tracey D.; Heath, Andrew C.; Montgomery, Grant W.; Martin, Nicholas G.; Sullivan, Patrick F.; Kaprio, Jaakko; Breen, Gerome; Gelernter, Joel; Edenberg, Howard J.; Bulik, Cynthia M.; Agrawal, Arpana; Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, School of MedicineEating disorders and substance use disorders frequently co-occur. Twin studies reveal shared genetic risk between eating disorders and substance use, with the strongest associations between symptoms of bulimia nervosa (BN) and problem alcohol use, mainly abuse and dependence (twin-based genetic correlation [rg]=0.23–0.53). Analytic advances facilitate the computation of genetic correlations using summary statistics from existing genome-wide association studies (GWAS). We investigated shared genetic risk between eating disorder and substance use and disorder phenotypes using GWAS data. Four eating disorder phenotypes (anorexia nervosa [AN], AN with binge-eating, AN without binge-eating, and a BN factor score), and eight substance use-related phenotypes (drinks per week, alcohol use disorder [AUD], smoking initiation, current smoking, cigarettes per day, nicotine dependence, cannabis initiation, and cannabis use disorder) from eight studies were included. Total sample sizes per phenotype ranged from ~2,400 to ~537,000 individuals. We used linkage disequilibrium score regression to calculate single nucleotide polymorphism-based genetic correlations between eating disorder and substance use-related phenotypes. Significant positive genetic associations emerged between AUD and AN (rg=0.18; false discovery rate q=0.0006), cannabis initiation and AN (rg=0.23; q<0.0001), and cannabis initiation and AN with binge-eating (rg=0.27; q=0.0016). Conversely, significant negative genetic correlations were observed between three non-diagnostic smoking phenotypes (smoking initiation, smoking cessation, and cigarettes per day) and AN without binge-eating (rgs=−0.19 to −0.23; qs<0.04). The observed patterns of association between different eating disorder and substance use-related phenotypes highlights the potentially complex and substance-specific relationships between these behaviors associated with significant public health burden.Item Transancestral GWAS of alcohol dependence reveals common genetic underpinnings with psychiatric disorders(Springer Nature, 2018-12) Walters, Raymond K.; Polimanti, Renato; Johnson, Emma C.; McClintick, Jeanette N.; Adams, Mark J.; Adkins, Amy E.; Aliev, Fazil; Bacanu, Silviu-Alin; Batzler, Anthony; Bertelsen, Sarah; Biernacka, Joanna M.; Bigdeli, Tim B.; Chen, Li-Shiun; Clarke, Toni-Kim; Chou, Yi-Ling; Degenhardt, Franziska; Docherty, Anna R.; Edwards, Alexis C.; Fontanillas, Pierre; Foo, Jerome C.; Fox, Louis; Frank, Josef; Giegling, Ina; Gordon, Scott; Hack, Laura M.; Hartmann, Annette M.; Hartz, Sarah M.; Heilmann-Heimbach, Stefanie; Herms, Stefan; Hodgkinson, Colin; Hoffmann, Per; Hottenga, Jouke Jan; Kennedy, Martin A.; Alanne-Kinnunen, Mervi; Konte, Bettina; Lahti, Jari; Lahti-Pulkkinen, Marius; Lai, Dongbing; Ligthart, Lannie; Loukola, Anu; Maher, Brion S.; Mbarek, Hamdi; McIntosh, Andrew M.; McQueen, Matthew B.; Meyers, Jacquelyn L.; Milaneschi, Yuri; Palviainen, Teemu; Pearson, John F.; Peterson, Roseann E.; Ripatti, Samuli; Ryu, Euijung; Saccone, Nancy L.; Salvatore, Jessica E.; Sanchez-Roige, Sandra; Schwandt, Melanie; Sherva, Richard; Streit, Fabian; Strohmaier, Jana; Thomas, Nathaniel; Wang, Jen-Chyong; Webb, Bradley T.; Wedow, Robbee; Wetherill, Leah; Wills, Amanda G.; Boardman, Jason D.; Chen, Danfeng; Choi, Doo-Sup; Copeland, William E.; Culverhouse, Robert C.; Dahmen, Norbert; Degenhardt, Louisa; Domingue, Benjamin W.; Elson, Sarah L.; Frye, Mark A.; Gäbel, Wolfgang; Hayward, Caroline; Ising, Marcus; Keyes, Margaret; Kiefer, Falk; Kramer, John; Kuperman, Samuel; Lucae, Susanne; Lynskey, Michael T.; Maier, Wolfgang; Mann, Karl; Männistö, Satu; Müller-Myhsok, Bertram; Murray, Alison D.; Nurnberger, John I.; Palotie, Aarno; Preuss, Ulrich; Räikkönen, Katri; Reynolds, Maureen D.; Ridinger, Monika; Scherbaum, Norbert; Schuckit, Marc A.; Soyka, Michael; Treutlein, Jens; Witt, Stephanie; Wodarz, Norbert; Zill, Peter; Adkins, Daniel E.; Boden, Joseph M.; Boomsma, Dorret I.; Bierut, Laura J.; Brown, Sandra A.; Bucholz, Kathleen K.; Cichon, Sven; Costello, E. Jane; de Wit, Harriet; Diazgranados, Nancy; Dick, Danielle M.; Eriksson, Johan G.; Farrer, Lindsay A.; Foroud, Tatiana M.; Gillespie, Nathan A.; Goate, Alison M.; Goldman, David; Grucza, Richard A.; Hancock, Dana B.; Harris, Kathleen Mullan; Heath, Andrew C.; Hesselbrock, Victor; Hewitt, John K.; Hopfer, Christian J.; Horwood, John; Iacono, William; Johnson, Eric O.; Kaprio, Jaakko A.; Karpyak, Victor M.; Kendler, Kenneth S.; Kranzler, Henry R.; Krauter, Kenneth; Lichtenstein, Paul; Lind, Penelope A.; McGue, Matt; MacKillop, James; Madden, Pamela A. F.; Maes, Hermine H.; Magnusson, Patrik; Martin, Nicholas G.; Medland, Sarah E.; Montgomery, Grant W.; Nelson, Elliot C.; Nöthen, Markus M.; Palmer, Abraham A.; Pedersen, Nancy L.; Penninx, Brenda W.J.H.; Porjesz, Bernice; Rice, John P.; Rietschel, Marcella; Riley, Brien P.; Rose, Richard; Rujescu, Dan; Shen, Pei-Hong; Silberg, Judy; Stallings, Michael C.; Tarter, Ralph E.; Vanyukov, Michael M.; Vrieze, Scott; Wall, Tamara L.; Whitfield, John B.; Zhao, Hongyu; Neale, Benjamin M.; Gelernter, Joel; Edenberg, Howard J.; Agrawal, Arpana; Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, School of MedicineLiability to alcohol dependence (AD) is heritable, but little is known about its complex polygenic architecture or its genetic relationship with other disorders. To discover loci associated with AD and characterize the relationship between AD and other psychiatric and behavioral outcomes, we carried out the largest genome-wide association study to date of DSM-IV-diagnosed AD. Genome-wide data on 14,904 individuals with AD and 37,944 controls from 28 case-control and family-based studies were meta-analyzed, stratified by genetic ancestry (European, n = 46,568; African, n = 6,280). Independent, genome-wide significant effects of different ADH1B variants were identified in European (rs1229984; P = 9.8 × 10-13) and African ancestries (rs2066702; P = 2.2 × 10-9). Significant genetic correlations were observed with 17 phenotypes, including schizophrenia, attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder, depression, and use of cigarettes and cannabis. The genetic underpinnings of AD only partially overlap with those for alcohol consumption, underscoring the genetic distinction between pathological and nonpathological drinking behaviors.