4.7 Article

Multivariate analysis of 1.5 million people identifies genetic associations with traits related to self-regulation and addiction

Journal

NATURE NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 24, Issue 10, Pages 1367-1376

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41593-021-00908-3

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Funding

  1. Externalizing Consortium
  2. internal review board of Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) [HM20019386]
  3. Million Veterans Program
  4. International Cannabis Consortium
  5. Social Science Genetics Association Consortium
  6. Broad Antisocial Behavior Consortium [40830, 11425]
  7. Indiana University
  8. Rutgers University
  9. Department of Biomedical and Health Informatics, The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
  10. Virginia Commonwealth University
  11. Howard University
  12. National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism
  13. NIAAA through an administrative supplement [R01AA015416]
  14. National Institute of Drug Abuse [P50DA037844]
  15. NIAAA
  16. European Research Council [647648 EdGe]
  17. Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) [R01HD092548, R01HD083613]
  18. Jacobs Foundation
  19. NARSAD Young Investigator Award from the Brain and Behavior Foundation [27676]
  20. California Tobacco-Related Disease Research Program [28IR-0070, T29KT0526, P01HD031921]
  21. Eunice Kennedy Shriver NICHD - Eunice Kennedy Shriver NICHD [R01HD073342, R01HD060726]
  22. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [U10AA008401]
  23. National Institute on Drug Abuse
  24. Vanderbilt University Medical Center's BioVU [S10RR025141]
  25. CTSA [UL1TR002243, UL1TR000445, UL1RR024975, U01HG004798, R01NS032830, RC2GM092618, P50GM115305, U01HG006378, U19HL065962, R01HD074711, RC2MH089983, RC2MH089924]
  26. Center for Applied Genomics (CAG) at The Children's Hospital in Philadelphia (CHOP)

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Research shows that persistent difficulties in self-regulation may be conceptualized as a neurodevelopmental trait with complex and far-reaching social and health correlates. By leveraging genetic correlations, over 500 genetic loci related to externalizing traits were identified, enriched for genes expressed in the brain and related to nervous system development.
Behaviors and disorders related to self-regulation, such as substance use, antisocial behavior and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, are collectively referred to as externalizing and have shared genetic liability. We applied a multivariate approach that leverages genetic correlations among externalizing traits for genome-wide association analyses. By pooling data from similar to 1.5 million people, our approach is statistically more powerful than single-trait analyses and identifies more than 500 genetic loci. The loci were enriched for genes expressed in the brain and related to nervous system development. A polygenic score constructed from our results predicts a range of behavioral and medical outcomes that were not part of genome-wide analyses, including traits that until now lacked well-performing polygenic scores, such as opioid use disorder, suicide, HIV infections, criminal convictions and unemployment. Our findings are consistent with the idea that persistent difficulties in self-regulation can be conceptualized as a neurodevelopmental trait with complex and far-reaching social and health correlates.

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