Abstract

BackgroundBipolar disorder (BD) is a complex mood disorder. The genetic mechanism of BD remains largely unknown.MethodsWe conducted an integrative analysis of genome-wide association study (GWAS) and regulatory SNP (rSNP) annotation datasets, including transcription factor binding regions (TFBRs), chromatin interactive regions (CIRs), mature microRNA regions (miRNAs), long non-coding RNA regions (lncRNAs), topologically associated domains (TADs) and circular RNAs (circRNAs). Firstly, GWAS dataset 1 of BD (including 20,352 cases and 31,358 controls) and GWAS dataset 2 of BD (including 7481 BD patients and 9250 controls) were integrated with rSNP annotation database to obtain BD associated SNP regulatory elements and SNP regulatory element-target gene (E–G) pairs, respectively. Secondly, a comparative analysis of the two datasets results was conducted to identify the common rSNPs and also their target genes. Then, gene sets enrichment analysis (FUMA GWAS) and HumanNet-XC analysis were conducted to explore the functional relevance of identified target genes with BD.ResultsAfter the integrative analysis, we identified 52 TFBRs target genes, 44 TADs target genes, 55 CIRs target genes and 21 lncRNAs target genes for BD, such as ITIH4 (Pdataset1 = 6.68 × 10−8, Pdataset2 = 6.64 × 10−7), ITIH3 (Pdataset1 = 1.09 × 10−8, Pdataset2 = 2.00 × 10−7), SYNE1 (Pdataset1 = 1.80 × 10−6, Pdataset2 = 4.33 × 10−9) and OPRM1 (Pdataset1 = 1.80 × 10−6, Pdataset2 = 4.33 × 10−9).ConclusionWe conducted a large-scale integrative analysis of GWAS and 6 common rSNP information datasets to explore the potential roles of rSNPs in the genetic mechanism of BD. We identified multiple candidate genes for BD, supporting the importance of rSNP in the development of BD.

Highlights

  • Bipolar disorder (BD) is a complex mood disorder

  • BD associated regulatory SNP (rSNP) and their target genes genome-wide association studies (GWAS) dataset 1 study identified a group of rSNPs for BD, including 218 rSNP for transcription factor binding regions (TFBRs), 1200 rSNP for topologically associated domains (TADs), 624 rSNP for chromatin interactive regions (CIRs) and 130 rSNP for long non-coding RNA regions (lncRNAs), corresponding to 507, 362, 591 and 142 target regulatory genes, respectively (Additional file 1: Table S1). 1751 of these rSNPs had been demonstrated as eQTLs in the previous literature

  • After comparing GWAS dataset 1 and GWAS dataset 2 study results, we identified 52 common target genes for TFBRs, 44 common target genes for TADs, 55 common target genes for CIRs and 21 common target genes for lncRNAs, respectively (Additional file 3: Table S3)

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Summary

Introduction

Bipolar disorder (BD) is a complex mood disorder. The genetic mechanism of BD remains largely unknown. Bipolar disorder (BD) is a common and often. BD is a complex disorder with strong genetic factors (Mühleisen et al 2014). Multiple genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of BD has been conducted. A large-scale GWAS of 7481 individuals with BD and 9250 controls identified a new susceptibility variant in ODZ4 gene (Psychiatric et al 2011). GWAS has successfully identified multiple susceptibility genes associated with BD, there is still a challenge to clarify the roles of genomic regulatory elements in the development of BD. Recent studies observed that the significant SNPs detected by GWAS were enriched in non-coding regulatory genomic loci, for instance, expression quantitative traits (eQTLs) (Vernot et al 2012).

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