Functional classes of SNPs related to psychiatric disorders and behavioral traits contrast with those related to neurological disorders

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Abstract

We investigated the functional classes of genomic regions containing SNPS contributing most to the SNP-heritability of important psychiatric and neurological disorders and behavioral traits, as determined from recent genome-wide association studies. We employed linkage- disequilibrium score regression with several brain-specific genomic annotations not previously utilized. The classes of genomic annotations conferring substantial SNP-heritability for the psychiatric disorders and behavioral traits differed systematically from the classes associated with neurological disorders, and both differed from the classes enriched for height, a biometric trait used here as a control outgroup. The SNPs implicated in these psychiatric disorders and behavioral traits were highly enriched in CTCF binding sites, in conserved regions likely to be enhancers, and in brain-specific promoters, regulatory sites likely to affect responses to experience. The SNPs relevant for neurological disorders were highly enriched in constitutive coding regions and splice regulatory sites.

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Reimers, M. A., & Kendler, K. S. (2024). Functional classes of SNPs related to psychiatric disorders and behavioral traits contrast with those related to neurological disorders. PLoS ONE, 19(5 May). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0247212

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