SleepCited

The genetic etiology of periodic limb movement in sleep.

Jacob L Edelson, Logan D Schneider, David Amar, Andreas Brink-Kjaer, Katie L Cederberg et al.
Meta-Analysis Sleep 2023 8 citazioni

Disegno dello studio

Tipo di studio
meta-analysis (GWAS joint meta-analysis)
Dimensione del campione
6843
Popolazione
4 cohorts (MrOS, Wisconsin Sleep Cohort Study, HypnoLaus, MESA); 6843 total subjects with PLMS
Intervento
The genetic etiology of periodic limb movement in sleep. not applicable
Comparatore
PLMS cases vs controls
Esito primario
genetic loci associated with periodic limb movement in sleep (PLMS)
Direzione dell'effetto
Positive
Rischio di bias
Low

Abstract

STUDY OBJECTIVES: Periodic limb movement in sleep is a common sleep phenotype characterized by repetitive leg movements that occur during or before sleep. We conducted a genome-wide association study (GWAS) of periodic limb movements in sleep (PLMS) using a joint analysis (i.e., discovery, replication, and joint meta-analysis) of four cohorts (MrOS, the Wisconsin Sleep Cohort Study, HypnoLaus, and MESA), comprised of 6843 total subjects. METHODS: The MrOS study and Wisconsin Sleep Cohort Study (N = 1745 cases) were used for discovery. Replication in the HypnoLaus and MESA cohorts (1002 cases) preceded joint meta-analysis. We also performed LD score regression, estimated heritability, and computed genetic correlations between potentially associated traits such as restless leg syndrome (RLS) and insomnia. The causality and direction of the relationships between PLMS and RLS was evaluated using Mendelian randomization. RESULTS: We found 2 independent loci were significantly associated with PLMS: rs113851554 (p = 3.51 × 10-12, β = 0.486), an SNP located in a putative regulatory element of intron eight of MEIS1 (2p14); and rs9369062 (p = 3.06 × 10-22, β = 0.2093), a SNP located in the intron region of BTBD9 (6p12); both of which were also lead signals in RLS GWAS. PLMS is genetically correlated with insomnia, risk of stroke, and RLS, but not with iron deficiency. Pleiotropy adjusted Mendelian randomization analysis identified a causal effect of RLS on PLMS. CONCLUSIONS: Because PLMS is more common than RLS, PLMS may have multiple causes and additional studies are needed to further validate these findings.

TL;DR

Pleiotropy adjusted Mendelian randomization analysis identified a causal effect of RLS on PLMS, which is more common than RLS and may have multiple causes.

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