Genetic architecture distinguishes tinnitus from hearing loss

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作者
Royce E. Clifford
Adam X. Maihofer
Chris Chatzinakos
Jonathan R. I. Coleman
Nikolaos P. Daskalakis
Marianna Gasperi
Kelleigh Hogan
Elizabeth A. Mikita
Murray B. Stein
Catherine Tcheandjieu
Francesca Telese
Yanning Zuo
Allen F. Ryan
Caroline M. Nievergelt
机构
[1] Veterans Affairs San Diego Healthcare System,McLean Hospital
[2] Research Service,King’s College London, Social, Genetic and Developmental Psychiatry Centre
[3] University of California San Diego,undefined
[4] Division of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery,undefined
[5] University of California San Diego,undefined
[6] Department of Psychiatry,undefined
[7] Harvard Medical School,undefined
[8] Department of Psychiatry,undefined
[9] Center of Excellence in Depression and Anxiety Disorders,undefined
[10] King’s College London,undefined
[11] NIHR Maudsley BRC,undefined
[12] Institute of Psychiatry,undefined
[13] Psychology and Neuroscience,undefined
[14] Veterans Affairs San Diego Healthcare System,undefined
[15] Psychiatry Service,undefined
[16] University of California San Diego,undefined
[17] School of Public Health,undefined
[18] VA Palo Alto Health Care System,undefined
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摘要
Tinnitus is a heritable, highly prevalent auditory disorder treated by multiple medical specialties. Previous GWAS indicated high genetic correlations between tinnitus and hearing loss, with little indication of differentiating signals. We present a GWAS meta-analysis, triple previous sample sizes, and expand to non-European ancestries. GWAS in 596,905 Million Veteran Program subjects identified 39 tinnitus loci, and identified genes related to neuronal synapses and cochlear structural support. Applying state-of-the-art analytic tools, we confirm a large number of shared variants, but also a distinct genetic architecture of tinnitus, with higher polygenicity and large proportion of variants not shared with hearing difficulty. Tissue-expression analysis for tinnitus infers broad enrichment across most brain tissues, in contrast to hearing difficulty. Finally, tinnitus is not only correlated with hearing loss, but also with a spectrum of psychiatric disorders, providing potential new avenues for treatment. This study establishes tinnitus as a distinct disorder separate from hearing difficulties.
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