4.6 Article

Common polygenic variation contributes to risk of migraine in the Norfolk Island population

Journal

HUMAN GENETICS
Volume 134, Issue 10, Pages 1079-1087

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00439-015-1587-9

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia
  2. QUT Postgraduate Research Award (QUTPRA)
  3. Australian Postgraduate Award (APA)
  4. Corbett Postgraduate Research Scholarship
  5. Corbett Research
  6. Griffith University Areas of Strategic Investment for Chronic Disease Fellowship

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Migraine has been defined as a common disabling primary headache disorder. Epidemiology studies have provided with the undeniable evidence of genetic components as active players in the development of the disease under a polygenic model in which multiple risk alleles exert modest individual effects. Our objective was to test the contribution of a polygenic effect to migraine risk in the Norfolk Island population using a panel of SNPs reported to be disease associated in published migraine GWAS. We also investigated whether individual SNPs were associated with gene expression levels measured in whole blood. Polygenic scores were calculated in a total of 285 related individuals (74 cases, 211 controls) from the Norfolk Island using 51 SNPs previously reported to be associated with migraine in published GWAS. The association between polygenic score and migraine case-control status was tested using logistic regression. Results indicate that a migraine polygenic risk score was associated with migraine case-control status in this population (P = 0.016). This supports the hypothesis that multiple SNPs with weak effects collectively contribute to migraine risk in this population. Amongst the SNPs included in the polygenic model, four were associated with the expression of the USMG5 gene, including rs171251 (P = 0.012). Results from this study provide evidence for a polygenic contribution to migraine risk in an isolated population and highlight specific SNPs that regulate the expression of USMG5, a gene critical for mitochondrial function.

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