Investigating the Genetic Basis of the Co-occurrence of Irritable Bowel Syndrome and Anxiety
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Otros/as autores/as
Fecha de publicación
2021-09-13Resumen
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a chronic gastrointestinal disorder representing a serious burden to the
healthcare system. IBS research is extremely challenging due to the multifactorial etiology of the disease
and the heterogeneity of patients that present high comorbidity rates with mental disorders including
anxiety and depression. Such highly comorbid disorders show substantial heritability and are partly
determined by a genetic component. In the present study, we used data available from large pre-existing
genome-wide association studies on IBS (n=455,321) and anxiety (n=117,751) to assess the genetic
overlap and causal relationship between these comorbid disorders and found strong and positive genetic
correlation between them (rg=0.713, se= 0.076, P= 3.6e-20). The multi-trait analysis of GWAS (MTAG)
highlighted three new genome-wide significant loci for IBS located in, or nearby, genes related to synaptic
transmission, nervous system development, neuroticism, and epigenetic modification of chromatin. We
also used Mendelian randomization with a range of sensitivity analyses to clarify the causal relationship
between these disorders and found consistent evidence for a causal effect of the genetic liability of IBS
on anxiety (P=7.6e-05) but no evidence of causal effect was detected in the opposite direction. Our results
are consistent with a shared common genetic background between IBS and anxiety, highlight the
importance of common genetic factors in the risk of these comorbid disorders, and add insight into the
relationship between gastrointestinal and mental illnesses.
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Trabajo fin de máster
Versión del documento
Director/a: Mireia Olivella
Supervisor/a: Silvia Alemany i Marta Ribasés
Lengua
Inglés
Palabras clave
Ansietat
Depressió
Genètica
Còlon irritable
Páginas
23 p.
Nota
Curs 2020-2021
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