Genome-wide analyses of ADHD identify 27 risk loci, refine the genetic architecture and implicate several cognitive domains: [Inkl. Correction]

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Documents

  • Preprint

    Submitted manuscript, 811 KB, PDF document

  • Ditte Demontis
  • G. Bragi Walters
  • Georgios Athanasiadis
  • Raymond Walters
  • Karen Therrien
  • Trine Tollerup Nielsen
  • Leila Farajzadeh
  • Georgios Voloudakis
  • Jaroslav Bendl
  • Biau Zeng
  • Wen Zhang
  • Jakob Grove
  • Thomas D. Als
  • Jinjie Duan
  • F. Kyle Satterstrom
  • Jonas Bybjerg-Grauholm
  • Marie Bækved-Hansen
  • Olafur O. Gudmundsson
  • Sigurdur H. Magnusson
  • Gisli Baldursson
  • Katrin Davidsdottir
  • Gyda S. Haraldsdottir
  • Esben Agerbo
  • Gabriel E. Hoffman
  • Dalsgaard, Søren
  • Joanna Martin
  • Marta Ribasés
  • Dorret I. Boomsma
  • Maria Soler Artigas
  • Nina Roth Mota
  • Daniel Howrigan
  • Sarah E. Medland
  • Tetyana Zayats
  • Veera M. Rajagopal
  • Alexandra Havdahl
  • Alysa Doyle
  • Andreas Reif
  • Anita Thapar
  • Bru Cormand
  • Calwing Liao
  • Christie Burton
  • Claiton H.D. Bau
  • Diego Luiz Rovaris
  • Edmund Sonuga-Barke
  • Elizabeth Corfield
  • Eugenio Horacio Grevet
  • Henrik Larsson
  • Ian R. Gizer
  • Nordentoft, Merete
  • Werge, Thomas
  • ADHD Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium
  • iPSYCH-Broad Consortium

Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a prevalent neurodevelopmental disorder with a major genetic component. Here, we present a genome-wide association study meta-analysis of ADHD comprising 38,691 individuals with ADHD and 186,843 controls. We identified 27 genome-wide significant loci, highlighting 76 potential risk genes enriched among genes expressed particularly in early brain development. Overall, ADHD genetic risk was associated with several brain-specific neuronal subtypes and midbrain dopaminergic neurons. In exome-sequencing data from 17,896 individuals, we identified an increased load of rare protein-truncating variants in ADHD for a set of risk genes enriched with probable causal common variants, potentially implicating SORCS3 in ADHD by both common and rare variants. Bivariate Gaussian mixture modeling estimated that 84–98% of ADHD-influencing variants are shared with other psychiatric disorders. In addition, common-variant ADHD risk was associated with impaired complex cognition such as verbal reasoning and a range of executive functions, including attention.

Original languageEnglish
JournalNature Genetics
Volume55
Pages (from-to)198–208
Number of pages18
ISSN1061-4036
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2023

Bibliographical note

Correction: 10.1038/s41588-023-01350-w
Link: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41588-023-01350-w
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature America, Inc.

Number of downloads are based on statistics from Google Scholar and www.ku.dk


No data available

ID: 335666155