Genetic Risk Underlying Psychiatric and Cognitive Symptoms in Huntington’s Disease

Natalie Ellis(Cardiff University), Amelia Tee(Cardiff University), Branduff McAllister(Cardiff University), Thomas H. Massey(Cardiff University), Duncan McLauchlan(Cardiff University), Timothy Stone(University College London), Kevin Correia(Massachusetts General Hospital), Jacob M. Loupe(HudsonAlpha Institute for Biotechnology), Kyung‐Hee Kim(Harvard University), Douglas Barker(Massachusetts General Hospital), Eun Pyo Hong(Harvard University), Michael J. Chao(Harvard University), Jeffrey D. Long(University of Iowa), Diane Lucente(Harvard University), Jean Paul Vonsattel(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Ricardo Mouro Pinto(Harvard University), Kawther Abu Elneel(Massachusetts General Hospital), Eliana Marisa Ramos(Massachusetts General Hospital), Jayalakshmi Srinidhi Mysore(Massachusetts General Hospital), Tammy Gillis(Massachusetts General Hospital), Vanessa C. Wheeler(Harvard University), Christopher Medway(University Hospital of Wales), Lynsey S. Hall(Cardiff University), Seung Kwak(CHDI Foundation), Cristina Sampaio(CHDI Foundation), Marc Ciosi(University of Glasgow), Alastair Maxwell(University of Glasgow), Afroditi Chatzi(University of Glasgow), Darren G. Monckton(University of Glasgow), Michael Orth(Universität Ulm), G. Bernhard Landwehrmeyer(Universität Ulm), Jane S. Paulsen(University of Iowa), Ira Shoulson(University of Rochester Medical Center), Richard H. Myers(Boston University), Erik van Duijn(Leiden University Medical Center), Hugh Rickards(Birmingham and Solihull Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust), Marcy E. MacDonald(Broad Institute), Jongmin Lee(Harvard University), James F. Gusella(Broad Institute), Lesley Jones(Cardiff University), Peter Holmans(Cardiff University)
Biological Psychiatry
December 17, 2019
Cited by 45Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Huntington's disease (HD) is an inherited neurodegenerative disorder caused by an expanded CAG repeat in the HTT gene. It is diagnosed following a standardized examination of motor control and often presents with cognitive decline and psychiatric symptoms. Recent studies have detected genetic loci modifying the age at onset of motor symptoms in HD, but genetic factors influencing cognitive and psychiatric presentations are unknown. METHODS: We tested the hypothesis that psychiatric and cognitive symptoms in HD are influenced by the same common genetic variation as in the general population by 1) constructing polygenic risk scores from large genome-wide association studies of psychiatric and neurodegenerative disorders and of intelligence and 2) testing for correlation with the presence of psychiatric and cognitive symptoms in a large sample (n = 5160) of patients with HD. RESULTS: Polygenic risk score for major depression was associated specifically with increased risk of depression in HD, as was schizophrenia risk score with psychosis and irritability. Cognitive impairment and apathy were associated with reduced polygenic risk score for intelligence. CONCLUSIONS: Polygenic risk scores for psychiatric disorders, particularly depression and schizophrenia, are associated with increased risk of the corresponding psychiatric symptoms in HD, suggesting a common genetic liability. However, the genetic liability to cognitive impairment and apathy appears to be distinct from other psychiatric symptoms in HD. No associations were observed between HD symptoms and risk scores for other neurodegenerative disorders. These data provide a rationale for treatments effective in depression and schizophrenia to be used to treat depression and psychotic symptoms in HD.


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