Mutations in sphingolipid metabolism genes are associated with ADHD

Author:

Henriquez-Henriquez Marcela,Acosta Maria T.,Martinez Ariel F.ORCID,Vélez Jorge I.ORCID,Lopera Francisco,Pineda DavidORCID,Palacio Juan D.ORCID,Quiroga Teresa,Worgall Tilla S.,Deckelbaum Richard J.,Mastronardi Claudio,Molina Brooke S. G.ORCID,Vitiello Benedetto,Severe Joanne B.,Jensen Peter S.,Arnold L. Eugene,Hoagwood Kimberly,Richters John,Vereen Donald R.,Hinshaw Stephen P.,Elliott Glen R.,Wells Karen C.,Epstein Jeffery N.,Murray Desiree W.,Conners C. Keith,March John,Swanson James,Wigal Timothy,Cantwell Dennis P.,Abikoff Howard B.,Hechtman Lily,Greenhill Laurence L.,Newcorn Jeffrey H.,Molina Brooke S. G.,Hoza Betsy,Pelham William E.,Gibbons Robert D.,Marcus Sue,Hur Kwan,Kraemer Helena C.,Hanley Thomas,Stern Karen,Arcos-Burgos MauricioORCID,Muenke MaximilianORCID,

Abstract

AbstractAttention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is the most prevalent neurodevelopmental disorder in children, with genetic factors accounting for 75–80% of the phenotypic variance. Recent studies have suggested that ADHD patients might present with atypical central myelination that can persist into adulthood. Given the essential role of sphingolipids in myelin formation and maintenance, we explored genetic variation in sphingolipid metabolism genes for association with ADHD risk. Whole-exome genotyping was performed in three independent cohorts from disparate regions of the world, for a total of 1520 genotyped subjects. Cohort 1 (MTA (Multimodal Treatment study of children with ADHD) sample, 371 subjects) was analyzed as the discovery cohort, while cohorts 2 (Paisa sample, 298 subjects) and 3 (US sample, 851 subjects) were used for replication. A set of 58 genes was manually curated based on their roles in sphingolipid metabolism. A targeted exploration for association between ADHD and 137 markers encoding for common and rare potentially functional allelic variants in this set of genes was performed in the screening cohort. Single- and multi-locus additive, dominant and recessive linear mixed-effect models were used. During discovery, we found statistically significant associations between ADHD and variants in eight genes (GALC, CERS6, SMPD1, SMPDL3B, CERS2, FADS3, ELOVL5, and CERK). Successful local replication for associations with variants in GALC, SMPD1, and CERS6 was demonstrated in both replication cohorts. Variants rs35785620, rs143078230, rs398607, and rs1805078, associated with ADHD in the discovery or replication cohorts, correspond to missense mutations with predicted deleterious effects. Expression quantitative trait loci analysis revealed an association between rs398607 and increased GALC expression in the cerebellum.

Funder

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | National Human Genome Research Institute

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Biological Psychiatry,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Psychiatry and Mental health

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