Abstract

Psychiatric disorders are thought to have a complex genetic pathology consisting of interplay of common and rare variation. Traditionally, pedigrees are used to shed light on the latter only, while here we discuss the application of polygenic risk scores to also highlight patterns of common genetic risk. We analyze polygenic risk scores for psychiatric disorders in a large pedigree (n ~ 260) in which 30% of family members suffer from major depressive disorder or bipolar disorder. Studying patterns of assortative mating and anticipation, it appears increased polygenic risk is contributed by affected individuals who married into the family, resulting in an increasing genetic risk over generations. This may explain the observation of anticipation in mood disorders, whereby onset is earlier and the severity increases over the generations of a family. Joint analyses of rare and common variation may be a powerful way to understand the familial genetics of psychiatric disorders.

Highlights

  • Psychiatric disorders are thought to have a complex genetic pathology consisting of interplay of common and rare variation

  • We identified a large pedigree in Brazil, the Brazilian Bipolar Family (BBF), after examination of a 45-yearold female who presented with severe Bipolar Type 1 (BPI) disorder

  • While increased polygenic scores in patients as compared to unaffected family members have been demonstrated recently[17], we aimed to illustrate the possibilities of this approach by investigating apparent assortative mating and anticipation in a large multigenerational pedigree affected with mood disorders through polygenic risk scores for SCZ2, MDD18, and BPD19, and thereby improve mechanistic understanding of common genetic risk for psychiatric disorders

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Summary

Introduction

Psychiatric disorders are thought to have a complex genetic pathology consisting of interplay of common and rare variation. Studying patterns of assortative mating and anticipation, it appears increased polygenic risk is contributed by affected individuals who married into the family, resulting in an increasing genetic risk over generations. This may explain the observation of anticipation in mood disorders, whereby onset is earlier and the severity increases over the generations of a family. The development of polygenic risk scoring (PRS) has greatly advanced the field of psychiatric genetics This approach allows for even sub-genome-wide significant threshold results from large genome-wide meta analyses to be leveraged to explore genetic risk in smaller studies[1]. We aim to discuss the application of polygenic risk scoring for SCZ, MDD, and BPD to explore patterns of common risk variation within a family context. We illustrate our discussion by investigating the relationship between PRS and apparent assortative mating, and anticipation within a complex multigenerational pedigree affected with mood disorders

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