Abstract

BackgroundOne explanation for the persistence of schizophrenia despite the reduced fertility of patients is that it is a by-product of recent human evolution. This hypothesis is supported by evidence suggesting that recently-evolved genomic regions in humans are involved in the genetic risk for schizophrenia. Using summary statistics from genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of schizophrenia and 11 other phenotypes, we tested for enrichment of association with GWAS traits in regions that have undergone methylation changes in the human lineage compared to Neanderthals and Denisovans, i.e. human-specific differentially methylated regions (DMRs). We used analytical tools that evaluate polygenic enrichment of a subset of genomic variants against all variants.ResultsSchizophrenia was the only trait in which DMR SNPs showed clear enrichment of association that passed the genome-wide significance threshold. The enrichment was not observed for Neanderthal or Denisovan DMRs. The enrichment seen in human DMRs is comparable to that for genomic regions tagged by Neanderthal Selective Sweep markers, and stronger than that for Human Accelerated Regions. The enrichment survives multiple testing performed through permutation (n = 10,000) and bootstrapping (n = 5000) in INRICH (p < 0.01). Some enrichment of association with height was observed at the gene level.ConclusionsRegions where DNA methylation modifications have changed during recent human evolution show enrichment of association with schizophrenia and possibly with height. Our study further supports the hypothesis that genetic variants conferring risk of schizophrenia co-occur in genomic regions that have changed as the human species evolved. Since methylation is an epigenetic mark, potentially mediated by environmental changes, our results also suggest that interaction with the environment might have contributed to that association.

Highlights

  • One explanation for the persistence of schizophrenia despite the reduced fertility of patients is that it is a by-product of recent human evolution

  • genome-wide association studies (GWAS) summary statistics for 12 common traits were obtained from published datasets: schizophrenia [14], bipolar disorder (BPD) [34], attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) [35], rheumatoid arthritis [36], high density lipoprotein [37], low density lipoprotein [37], triglycerides [37], total cholesterol [37], systolic blood pressure [38], diastolic blood pressure [38], body mass index [39], and height [40]

  • We used quantile-quantile (QQ) plots as described by Schork et al [32] to test whether the Differentially methylated region (DMR) Single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) are enriched for association with the GWAS trait compared to the complete set of SNPs

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Summary

Introduction

One explanation for the persistence of schizophrenia despite the reduced fertility of patients is that it is a by-product of recent human evolution. This hypothesis is supported by evidence suggesting that recentlyevolved genomic regions in humans are involved in the genetic risk for schizophrenia. Power et al [11] leveraged Swedish registry data to demonstrate the reduced fecundity of patients with schizophrenia, despite the novel finding that sisters of individuals with schizophrenia had higher fitness than controls. They suggested hitherto unknown mechanisms for persistence of the disease.

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