Abstract
BACKGROUND: The presentation, etiology, and relative risk of psychiatric disorders are strongly influenced by biological sex. Neuroticism is a transdiagnostic feature of psychiatric disorders displaying prominent sex differences. We performed genome-wide association studies of neuroticism separately in males and females to identify sex-specific genetic and transcriptomic profiles.</p>
METHODS: Neuroticism scores were derived from the Eysenck Personality Inventory Neuroticism scale. Genome-wide association studies were performed in 145,669 females and 129,229 males from the UK Biobank considering autosomal and X chromosomal variation. Two-sided z tests were used to test for sex-specific effects of discovered loci, genetic correlates (n = 673 traits), tissue and gene transcriptomic profiles, and polygenic associations across health outcomes in the Vanderbilt University Biobank (39,692 females and 31,268 males).</p>
RESULTS: The single nucleotide polymorphism heritability of neuroticism was not statistically different between males (h2 = 10.6%) and females (h2 = 11.85%). Four female-specific (rs10736549-CNTN5, rs6507056-ASXL3, rs2087182-MMS22L, and rs72995548-HSPB2) and 2 male-specific (rs10507274-MED13L and rs7984597) neuroticism risk loci reached genome-wide significance. Male- and female-specific neuroticism polygenic scores were most significantly associated with mood disorders (males: odds ratio = 1.11, p = 1.40 × 10-9; females: odds ratio = 1.14, p = 6.05 × 10-22). They also associated with sex-specific laboratory measurements related to erythrocyte count, distribution, and hemoglobin concentration. Gene expression variation in the pituitary was enriched for neuroticism loci in males (male: b = 0.026, p = .002), and genetically regulated transcriptomic changes highlighted the effect of SHISHA9, TEX26, and NCOA6.</p>
CONCLUSIONS: Through a comprehensive assessment of genetic risk for neuroticism and the associated biological processes, this study identified several molecular pathways that can partially explain the known sex differences in neurotic symptoms and their psychiatric comorbidities.</p>