Nature Communications (May 2023)

The contributions of mitochondrial and nuclear mitochondrial genetic variation to neuroticism

  • Charley Xia,
  • Sarah J. Pickett,
  • David C. M. Liewald,
  • Alexander Weiss,
  • Gavin Hudson,
  • W. David Hill

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-38480-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Neuroticism is a heritable trait composed of separate facets, each conferring different levels of protection or risk, to health. By examining mitochondrial DNA in 269,506 individuals, we show mitochondrial haplogroups explain 0.07-0.01% of variance in neuroticism and identify five haplogroup and 15 mitochondria-marker associations across a general factor of neuroticism, and two special factors of anxiety/tension, and worry/vulnerability with effect sizes of the same magnitude as autosomal variants. Within-haplogroup genome-wide association studies identified H-haplogroup-specific autosomal effects explaining 1.4% variance of worry/vulnerability. These H-haplogroup-specific autosomal effects show a pleiotropic relationship with cognitive, physical and mental health that differs from that found when assessing autosomal effects across haplogroups. We identify interactions between chromosome 9 regions and mitochondrial haplogroups at P < 5 × 10−8, revealing associations between general neuroticism and anxiety/tension with brain-specific gene co-expression networks. These results indicate that the mitochondrial genome contributes toward neuroticism and the autosomal links between neuroticism and health.