Abstract

Schizophrenia is a debilitating and heritable mental disorder associated with lower reproductive success. However, the prevalence of schizophrenia is stable over populations and time, resulting in an evolutionary puzzle: how is schizophrenia maintained in the population, given its apparent fitness costs? One possibility is that increased genetic liability for schizophrenia, in the absence of the disorder itself, may confer some reproductive advantage. We assessed the correlation and causal effect of genetic liability for schizophrenia with number of children, age at first birth and number of sexual partners using data from the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium and UK Biobank. Linkage disequilibrium score regression showed little evidence of genetic correlation between genetic liability for schizophrenia and number of children (rg = 0.002, p = 0.84), age at first birth (rg = −0.007, p = 0.45) or number of sexual partners (rg = 0.007, p = 0.42). Mendelian randomization indicated no robust evidence of a causal effect of genetic liability for schizophrenia on number of children (mean difference: 0.003 increase in number of children per doubling in the natural log odds ratio of schizophrenia risk, 95% confidence interval (CI): −0.003 to 0.009, p = 0.39) or age at first birth (−0.004 years lower age at first birth, 95% CI: −0.043 to 0.034, p = 0.82). We find some evidence of a positive effect of genetic liability for schizophrenia on number of sexual partners (0.165 increase in the number of sexual partners, 95% CI: 0.117–0.212, p = 5.30×10−10). These results suggest that increased genetic liability for schizophrenia does not confer a fitness advantage but does increase mating success.

Highlights

  • Schizophrenia is a severe, debilitating mental disorder that is substantially heritable [1]

  • Our results do not indicate a genetic correlation between genetic liability for schizophrenia and reproductive success using linkage disequilibrium (LD) score regression, or a linear causal effect on number of children and mean number of sexual partners

  • 5.3 quintiles of genetic score for schizophrenia liability age at first birth using Mendelian randomization (MR) techniques. This is inconsistent with cliff-edge fitness maintaining schizophrenia in the population, which would predict an increase in fitness with increased genetic liability in the general population

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Summary

Introduction

Schizophrenia is a severe, debilitating mental disorder that is substantially heritable [1]. The prevalence of schizophrenia remains stable over populations and time, and yet is associated with lower reproductive success for those diagnosed [1,2,3,4,5] This creates an evolutionary puzzle: how is schizophrenia maintained in the population despite apparent negative selection? One is mutation–selection balance, which suggests that selection against detrimental variants is counteracted by the continuous occurrence of new mutations [8,9] Another is that effects over many common genetic variants are individually too weak to be under negative selection [1,8,10]. Schizotypy, a personality measure of schizophrenia-proneness, has been shown to be associated with creativity, short-term mating interest and mating success [4,13,15], while genetic liability for schizophrenia is associated with the increased risk of unprotected sex [16]

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