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Extracting stability increases the SNP heritability of emotional problems in young people
Cheesman, R., Major Depressive Disorder Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium, Purves, K. L., Pingault, J., Breen, G., Rijsdij K, F., Plomin, R., & Eley, T. C. (2018). Extracting stability increases the SNP heritability of emotional problems in young people. Translational Psychiatry, 8(1), Article 223. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41398-018-0269-5
Twin studies have shown that emotional problems (anxiety and depression) in childhood and adolescence are moderately heritable (similar to 20-50%). In contrast, DNA-based ` SNP heritability' estimates are generally < 15% and nonsignificant. One notable feature of emotional problems is that they can be somewhat transient, but the moderate stability seen across time and across raters is predominantly influenced by stable genetic influences. This suggests that by capturing what is in common across time and across raters, we might be more likely to tap into any underlying genetic vulnerability. We therefore hypothesised that a phenotype capturing the pervasive stability of emotional problems would show higher heritability. We fitted single-factor latent trait models using 12 emotional problems measures across ages 7, 12 and 16, rated by parents, teachers and children themselves in the Twins Early Development Study sample. Twin and SNP heritability estimates for stable emotional problems (N = 6110 pairs and 6110 unrelated individuals, respectively) were compared to those for individual measures. Twin heritability increased from 45% on average for individual measures to 76% (se = 0.023) by focusing on stable trait variance. SNP heritability rose from 5% on average (n. s.) to 14% (se = 0.049; p = 0.002). Heritability was also higher for stable within-rater composites. Polygenic scores for both adult anxiety and depression significantly explained variance in stable emotional problems (0.4%; p = 0.0001). The variance explained was more than in most individual measures. Stable emotional problems also showed significant genetic correlation with adult depression and anxiety (average = 52%). These results demonstrate the value of examining stable emotional problems in gene-finding and prediction studies.