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GWAS Study

Shared Molecular Genetic Mechanisms Underlie Endometriosis and Migraine Comorbidity.

Adewuyi EO, Sapkota Y, International Endogene Consortium Iec None et al.

32121467 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
411051 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

AE
Adewuyi EO
SY
Sapkota Y
IE
International Endogene Consortium Iec None
AR
andMe Research Team None
IH
International Headache Genetics Consortium Ihgc None
AA
Auta A
YK
Yoshihara K
NM
Nyegaard M
GL
Griffiths LR
MG
Montgomery GW
CD
Chasman DI
ND
Nyholt DR
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Observational epidemiological studies indicate that endometriosis and migraine co-occur within individuals more than expected by chance. However, the aetiology and biological mechanisms underlying their comorbidity remain unknown. Here we examined the relationship between endometriosis and migraine using genome-wide association study (GWAS) data. Single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) effect concordance analysis found a significant concordance of SNP risk effects across endometriosis and migraine GWAS. Linkage disequilibrium score regression analysis found a positive and highly significant genetic correlation (rG = 0.38, P = 2.30 × 10-25) between endometriosis and migraine. A meta-analysis of endometriosis and migraine GWAS data did not reveal novel genome-wide significant SNPs, and Mendelian randomisation analysis found no evidence for a causal relationship between the two traits. However, gene-based analyses identified two novel loci for migraine. Also, we found significant enrichment of genes nominally associated (Pgene < 0.05) with both traits (Pbinomial-test = 9.83 × 10-6). Combining gene-based p-values across endometriosis and migraine, three genes, two (TRIM32 and SLC35G6) of which are at novel loci, were genome-wide significant. Genes having Pgene < 0.1 for both endometriosis and migraine (Pbinomial-test = 1.85 ×10-°3) were significantly enriched for biological pathways, including interleukin-1 receptor binding, focal adhesion-PI3K-Akt-mTOR-signaling, MAPK and TNF-α signalling. Our findings further confirm the comorbidity of endometriosis and migraine and indicate a non-causal relationship between the two traits, with shared genetically-controlled biological mechanisms underlying the co-occurrence of the two disorders.

17,054 European and Japanese ancestry endometriosis cases, 29,208 European ancestry migraine cases, 191,858 European and Japanese ancestry controls, 172,931 European ancestry controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

411051
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
European, East Asian
Ancestry
Belgium, Denmark, Iceland, U.K., U.S., Australia, Japan
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of health and genetic findings

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