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Genetic variants for morningness in relation to habitual sleep-wake behavior and diurnal preference in a population-based sample of 17,243 adults
Affiliation:1. Department of Public Health Solutions, Finnish Institute for Health and Welfare, Helsinki, Finland;2. Department of Psychology and Logopedics and SleepWell Research Program, Faculty of Medicine, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland;3. Orton Orthopaedics Hospital, Helsinki, Finland;4. Department of Psychiatry and SleepWell Research Program, University of Helsinki and Helsinki University Hospital, Finland
Abstract:ObjectiveAssociations of eveningness with health hazards benefit from analyzing to what extent the polygenic score for morningness correlates with the assessments of the behavioral trait of morningness-eveningness and chronotype.MethodsWith a population-based sample of 17,243 Finnish adults, aged 25–74 years, this study examines the associations of four feasible assessment methods of chronotype, a) biological the genetic liability based on the polygenic score for morningness (PGSmorn), b) the widely-used single item for self-assessed morningness/eveningness (MEQi19) of the original Morningness-Eveningness Questionnaire (MEQ), c) the behavioral trait of morningness-eveningness as assessed with the score on the shortened version (sMEQ) of the original MEQ, and d) the phase of entrainment as assessed with the habitual midpoint of sleep based on the self-reported sleep-wake schedule during weekend (Sleepmid-wknd) as well as the sleep debt corrected midpoint of sleep (Sleepmid-corr).ResultsAll self-report measures correlated with each other, but very weakly with the PGSmorn, which explained 1–2% of the variation in diurnal preference or habitual sleep-wake schedule. The influence of age was greater on Sleepmid-wknd and Sleepmid-corr than on the sMEQ or MEQi19, indicating that the diurnal preference might be a more stable indicator for morningness-eveningness than the sleep-wake schedule. Analyses of the discrepancies between sMEQ and MEQi19 indicated that eveningness can be over-estimated when relying on only the single-item self-assessment.ConclusionsThe current polygenic score for morningness explains only a small proportion of the variation in diurnal preference or habitual sleep-wake schedule. The molecular genetic basis for morningness-eveningness needs further elucidation.
Keywords:Chronotype  Eveningness  MEQ  Polygenic risk score  Population-based  Sleep midpoint  GWAS"}  {"#name":"keyword"  "$":{"id":"kwrd0045"}  "$$":[{"#name":"text"  "_":"Genome-wide association study  MEQ"}  {"#name":"keyword"  "$":{"id":"kwrd0055"}  "$$":[{"#name":"text"  "_":"Morningness-Eveningness Questionnaire  Self-assessed morningness/eveningness based on item 19 from the original MEQ  PGS"}  {"#name":"keyword"  "$":{"id":"kwrd0075"}  "$$":[{"#name":"text"  "_":"Polygenic score  Polygenic score for morningness  Polygenic score for morningness with best fit p-value threshold  Midpoint of sleep on weekends  Midpoint of sleep corrected for sleep debt  sMEQ"}  {"#name":"keyword"  "$":{"id":"kwrd0125"}  "$$":[{"#name":"text"  "_":"6-item shortened version of the original MEQ
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