Daniel F Levey

Daniel F Levey
  • Ph.D. in Medical Neuroscience, Indiana University
  • Professor (Assistant) at Yale University

About

174
Publications
49,079
Reads
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5,068
Citations
Current institution
Yale University
Current position
  • Professor (Assistant)
Additional affiliations
November 2022 - present
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
Position
  • Researcher
July 2021 - present
Yale University
Position
  • Professor (Assistant)
July 2020 - June 2021
Yale University
Position
  • Research Associate
Description
  • Analyst with the Million Veteran Program
Education
August 2011 - June 2017
Indiana University School of Medicine - Lafayette
Field of study
  • Medical Neuroscience
August 1999 - June 2003
Indiana State University
Field of study
  • Psychology

Publications

Publications (174)
Article
Full-text available
Women are under-represented in research on suicidality to date. Although women have a lower rate of suicide completion than men, due in part to the less-violent methods used, they have a higher rate of suicide attempts. Our group has previously identified genomic (blood gene expression biomarkers) and clinical information (apps) predictors for suic...
Article
Full-text available
Objective: Anxiety disorders are common and often disabling. The goal of this study was to examine the genetic architecture of anxiety disorders and anxiety symptoms, which are also frequently comorbid with other mental disorders, such as major depressive disorder. Methods: Using one of the world's largest biobanks including genetic, environment...
Article
Full-text available
We conducted genome-wide association analyses of over 250,000 participants of European (EUR) and African (AFR) ancestry from the Million Veteran Program using electronic health record-validated post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) diagnosis and quantitative symptom phenotypes. Applying genome-wide multiple testing correction, we identified three s...
Article
Full-text available
Major depressive disorder is the most common neuropsychiatric disorder, affecting 11% of veterans. Here we report results of a large meta-analysis of depression using data from the Million Veteran Program, 23andMe, UK Biobank and FinnGen, including individuals of European ancestry (n = 1,154,267; 340,591 cases) and African ancestry (n = 59,600; 25,...
Article
Full-text available
This study investigated the genetic and epigenetic mechanisms underlying the comorbidity of five substance dependence diagnoses (SDs; alcohol, AD; cannabis, CaD; cocaine, CoD; opioid, OD; tobacco, TD). A latent class analysis (LCA) was performed on 22,668 individuals from six cohorts to identify comorbid DSM-IV SD patterns. In subsets of this sampl...
Preprint
Physical activity (PA) is one of the most fundamental of all traits in the animal kingdom, has pervasive health benefits, and is genetically influenced. Using data from the Million Veteran Program (MVP), we conducted genetic analyses of leisure, work, and home-time PA. For leisure, for individuals of European (EUR) ancestry, n=189,812 and SNP-based...
Preprint
Full-text available
Antidepressants are among the most-prescribed drugs worldwide, and selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) are among the most prescribed antidepressants, most commonly used for major depression. We sought to increase our understanding of the biological relationships between SSRI use and a range of psychiatric traits by conducting Genome Wid...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background: The Hierarchical Taxonomy of Psychopathology (HiTOP) and Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) frameworks emphasize transdiagnostic and mechanistic aspects of psychopathology, respectively. We used a multiomics approach to examine how externalizing (EXT), internalizing (INT), and shared EXT+INT liability map onto these models. Methods: We con...
Article
In a genome-wide association study (GWAS) meta-analysis of 688,808 individuals with major depression (MD) and 4,364,225 controls from 29 countries across diverse and admixed ancestries, we identify 697 associations at 635 loci, 293 of which are novel. Using fine-mapping and functional tools, we find 308 high-confidence gene associations and enrichm...
Article
Full-text available
Background Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) affects over 15 million individuals in the United States, contributing to oxidative stress, neuroinflammation, and elevating the risk of neurodegeneration. Despite this, the connection between AUD and aging conditions, particularly Alzheimer’s disease (AD), remains unclear. AD, with a heritability of 60‐80%, is...
Article
Full-text available
Background Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) affects over 15 million individuals in the United States, contributing to oxidative stress, neuroinflammation, and elevating the risk of neurodegeneration. Despite this, the connection between AUD and aging conditions, particularly Alzheimer’s disease (AD), remains unclear. AD, with a heritability of 60‐80%, is...
Preprint
Full-text available
Strong sex differences exist in sleep phenotypes and also cardiovascular diseases (CVDs). However, sex-specific causal effects of sleep phenotypes on CVD-related outcomes have not been thoroughly examined. Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis is a useful approach for estimating the causal effect of a risk factor on an outcome of interest when inte...
Chapter
These are exciting times for psychiatry and clinical neuroscience. Our knowledge of basic brain function continues to increase at an accelerating pace as the experimental tools available to basic and clinical scientists become ever more powerful and penetrating. After decades of frustration and relatively slow progress, this explosion of knowledge...
Preprint
Background The long-term impact of opioid use disorder (OUD) on brain health has been little explored although of potentially high public health importance. Objectives To investigate the potential causal impact of OUD on later life brain health outcomes, including dementia, stroke and brain structure. Methods Observational and Mendelian randomiza...
Article
Background Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and depression are common after mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI), but their biological drivers are uncertain. We therefore explored whether polygenic risk scores (PRS) derived for PTSD and major depressive disorder (MDD) are associated with the development of cognate TBI-related phenotypes. Method...
Article
Full-text available
Myasthenia gravis (MG) is a rare autoantibody-mediated disease affecting the neuromuscular junction. We performed a genome-wide association study of 5708 MG cases and 432,028 controls of European ancestry and a replication study in 3989 cases and 226,643 controls provided by 23andMe Inc. We identified 12 independent genome-wide significant hits (P...
Article
Full-text available
Background Cannabis use during adolescence and young adulthood has been associated with brain harm, yet despite a rapid increase in cannabis use among older adults in the past decade, the impact on brain health in this population remains understudied. Objective To explore observational and genetic associations between cannabis use and brain struct...
Article
Background Atopic dermatitis (AD) has been associated with psychiatric comorbidities. Objectives To characterize the association between AD and bipolar disorder (BPD) with a case-control study of the NIH All of Us Research Program. Methods Utilizing Systemized Nomenclature of Medicine diagnostic codes, we identified cases of AD. Four age, sex, an...
Preprint
Full-text available
Objective: This study investigated the genetic and epigenetic mechanisms underlying the comorbidity patterns of five substance dependence diagnoses (SDs; alcohol, AD; cannabis, CaD; cocaine, CoD; opioid, OD; tobacco, TD). Methods: A latent class analysis (LCA) was performed on 31,197 individuals (average age 42+-11 years; 49% females) from six coho...
Article
Full-text available
Personality is influenced by both genetic and environmental factors and is associated with other psychiatric traits such as anxiety and depression. The ‘big five’ personality traits, which include neuroticism, extraversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness and openness, are a widely accepted and influential framework for understanding and describin...
Article
Full-text available
One of the justifiable criticisms of human genetic studies is the underrepresentation of participants from diverse populations. Lack of inclusion must be addressed at-scale to identify causal disease factors and understand the genetic causes of health disparities. We present genome-wide associations for 2068 traits from 635,969 participants in the...
Preprint
Full-text available
The major anxiety disorders (ANX; including generalized anxiety disorder, panic disorder, and phobias) are highly prevalent, often onset early, persist throughout life, and cause substantial global disability. Although distinct in their clinical presentations, they likely represent differential expressions of a dysregulated threat-response system....
Article
Full-text available
Individuals with schizophrenia frequently experience co-occurring substance use, including tobacco smoking and heavy cannabis use, and substance use disorders. There is interest in understanding the extent to which these relationships are causal, and to what extent shared genetic factors play a role. We explored the relationships between schizophre...
Article
Full-text available
Adverse childhood events (ACEs) contribute to the development of mood and anxiety disorders and substance dependence. However, the extent to which these effects are direct or indirect and whether genetic risk moderates them is unclear. We examined associations among ACEs, mood/anxiety disorders and substance dependence in 12,668 individuals (44.9%...
Article
Full-text available
Epiretinal membrane (ERM) is a common retinal condition characterized by the presence of fibrocellular tissue on the retinal surface, often with visual distortion and loss of visual acuity. We studied European American (EUR), African American (AFR), and Latino (admixed American, AMR) ERM participants in the Million Veteran Program (MVP) for genome-...
Preprint
Objective To examine the causal relationship between alcohol use and dementia risk across multiple ancestry groups. Design We triangulated evidence from observational and univariable and multivariable Mendelian randomization. Setting and participants Cross-ancestry observational analyses were conducted in two large prospective studies: the US Milli...
Article
Full-text available
Objective Comorbid anxiety occurs often in MS and is associated with disability progression. Polygenic scores offer a possible means of anxiety risk prediction but often have not been validated outside the original discovery population. We aimed to investigate the association between the Generalized Anxiety Disorder 2‐item scale polygenic score wit...
Article
Full-text available
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) genetics are characterized by lower discoverability than most other psychiatric disorders. The contribution to biological understanding from previous genetic studies has thus been limited. We performed a multi-ancestry meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies across 1,222,882 individuals of European anc...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background There is considerable comorbidity between externalizing (EXT) and internalizing (INT) psychopathology. Understanding the shared genetic underpinnings of these spectra is crucial for advancing knowledge of their biological bases and potential health impacts, and for informing empirical models like the Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) and H...
Preprint
Full-text available
There is considerable comorbidity across externalizing and internalizing behavior dimensions of psychopathology. We applied genomic structural equation modeling (gSEM) to genome-wide association study (GWAS) summary statistics to evaluate the factor structure of externalizing and internalizing psychopathology across 16 traits and disorders among Eu...
Article
Full-text available
Cannabis use disorder (CanUD) has increased with the legalization of the use of cannabis. Around 20% of individuals using cannabis develop CanUD, and the number of users has grown with increasing ease of access. CanUD and other substance use disorders (SUDs) are associated phenotypically and genetically. We leveraged new CanUD genomics data to unde...
Preprint
Full-text available
Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) affects ~1% of the population and exhibits a high SNP-heritability, yet previous genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have provided limited information on the genetic etiology and underlying biological mechanisms of the disorder. We conducted a GWAS meta-analysis combining 53,660 OCD cases and 2,044,417 control...
Article
Full-text available
Nearly two hundred common-variant depression risk loci have been identified by genome-wide association studies (GWAS). However, the impact of rare coding variants on depression remains poorly understood. Here, we present whole-exome sequencing analyses of depression with seven different definitions based on survey, questionnaire, and electronic hea...
Preprint
Full-text available
Cannabis use disorder (CUD) and cannabis use (CU) are prevalent conditions cooccurring with ADHD, but not much is known about the underlying shared genetics. Here we perform cross-disorder GWAS meta-analyses of ADHD and CUD or CU to identify pleiotropic risk loci and evaluate differences in the genetics of ADHD-CUD and ADHD-CU, and subsequently we...
Article
Full-text available
Individuals suffering from chronic pain develop substance use disorders (SUDs) more often than others. Understanding the shared genetic influences underlying the comorbidity between chronic pain and SUDs will lead to a greater understanding of their biology. Genome-wide association statistics were obtained from the UK Biobank for multisite chronic...
Article
Full-text available
We present an ensemble transfer learning method to predict suicide from Veterans Affairs (VA) electronic medical records (EMR). A diverse set of base models was trained to predict a binary outcome constructed from reported suicide, suicide attempt, and overdose diagnoses with varying choices of study design and prediction methodology. Each model us...
Preprint
Full-text available
Individuals with schizophrenia frequently experience co-occurring substance use, including tobacco smoking and heavy cannabis use, and substance use disorders. There is interest in understanding the extent to which these relationships are causal, and to what extent shared genetic factors play a role. We explored the relationships between schizophre...
Preprint
Full-text available
Personality is influenced by both genetic and environmental factors and is associated with other psychiatric traits such as anxiety and depression. The Big Five personality traits, which include neuroticism, extraversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness, and openness, are a widely accepted and influential framework for understanding and describing...
Article
Full-text available
Most genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of major depression (MD) have been conducted in samples of European ancestry. Here we report a multi-ancestry GWAS of MD, adding data from 21 cohorts with 88,316 MD cases and 902,757 controls to previously reported data. This analysis used a range of measures to define MD and included samples of African (...
Article
Full-text available
Problematic alcohol use (PAU), a trait that combines alcohol use disorder and alcohol-related problems assessed with a questionnaire, is a leading cause of death and morbidity worldwide. Here we conducted a large cross-ancestry meta-analysis of PAU in 1,079,947 individuals (European, N = 903,147; African, N = 122,571; Latin American, N = 38,962; Ea...
Article
Full-text available
As recreational use of cannabis is being decriminalized in many places and medical use widely sanctioned, there are growing concerns about increases in cannabis use disorder (CanUD), which is associated with numerous medical comorbidities. Here we performed a genome-wide association study of CanUD in the Million Veteran Program (MVP), followed by m...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background Adverse childhood events (ACEs) contribute to the development of mood and anxiety disorders and substance dependence. However, the extent to which these effects are direct or indirect and whether genetic risk moderates them is unclear. Methods We examined associations among ACEs, mood/anxiety disorders, and substance dependence in 12,66...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background Adverse childhood events (ACEs) contribute to the development of mood and anxiety disorders and substance dependence. However, the extent to which these effects are direct or indirect and whether genetic risk moderates them is unclear. Methods We examined associations among ACEs, mood/anxiety disorders, and substance dependence in 12,66...
Article
Full-text available
Objective: Suicidal behavior is heritable and is a major cause of death worldwide. Two large-scale genome-wide association studies (GWASs) recently discovered and cross-validated genome-wide significant (GWS) loci for suicide attempt (SA). The present study leveraged the genetic cohorts from both studies to conduct the largest GWAS meta-analysis o...
Article
Full-text available
Sleep duration has been linked to a wide range of negative health outcomes and to reduced life expectancy. We present genome-wide association studies of short ( ≤ 5 h) and long ( ≥ 10 h) sleep duration in adults of European (N = 445,966), African (N = 27,785), East Asian (N = 3141), and admixed-American (N = 16,250) ancestry from UK Biobank and the...
Article
Full-text available
Major depression (MD) is a serious psychiatric illness afflicting nearly 5% of the world’s population. A large correlational literature suggests that loneliness is a prospective risk factor for MD; correlational assocations of this nature may be confounded for a variety of reasons. This report uses Mendelian Randomization (MR) to examine potentiall...
Preprint
Full-text available
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) genetics are characterized by lower discoverability than most other psychiatric disorders. The contribution to biological understanding from previous genetic studies has thus been limited. We performed a multi-ancestry meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies across 1,222,882 individuals of European ance...
Article
Full-text available
Depression is a common psychiatric disorder and a leading cause of disability worldwide. Here we conducted a genome-wide association study meta-analysis of six datasets, including >1.3 million individuals (371,184 with depression) and identified 243 risk loci. Overall, 64 loci were new, including genes encoding glutamate and GABA receptors, which a...
Preprint
Full-text available
Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have underrepresented individuals from non-European populations, impeding progress in characterizing the genetic architecture and consequences of health and disease traits. To address this, we present a population-stratified phenome-wide GWAS followed by a multi-population meta-analysis for 2,068 traits derive...
Article
Full-text available
Background The Million Veteran Program (MVP) participants represent 100 years of US history, including significant social and demographic changes over time. Our study assessed two aspects of the MVP: (i) longitudinal changes in population diversity and (ii) how these changes can be accounted for in genome-wide association studies (GWAS). To investi...
Article
Endometriosis is a chronic gynecologic disease that causes pelvic pain and is often seen in association with depression and anxiety. The association with these mental health conditions was previously linked to chronic pain, although some evidence suggests this is not the sole factor. A genetic correlation has shown a potential causal effect of depr...
Preprint
IMPORTANCE: Epiretinal membrane (ERM) is a common retinal condition characterized by the presence of fibrocellular tissue on the retinal surface, often with consequent loss of vision and visual distortion. OBJECTIVE: Genomewide association studies (GWAS) can reveal the biology underlying complex genetic traits like ERM; there have been no previous...
Article
Full-text available
Anxiety disorders are increasingly prevalent, affect people’s ability to do things, and decrease quality of life. Due to lack of objective tests, they are underdiagnosed and sub-optimally treated, resulting in adverse life events and/or addictions. We endeavored to discover blood biomarkers for anxiety, using a four-step approach. First, we used a...
Article
Background Decades of research have shown that environmental exposures, including self-reports of trauma, are partly heritable. Heritable characteristics may influence exposure to and interpretations of environmental factors. Identifying heritable factors associated with self-reported trauma could improve our understanding of vulnerability to expos...
Preprint
Full-text available
Problematic alcohol use (PAU) is a leading cause of death and disability worldwide. To improve our understanding of the genetics of PAU, we conducted a large cross-ancestry meta-analysis of PAU in 1,079,947 individuals. We observed a high degree of cross-ancestral similarity in the genetic architecture of PAU and identified 110 independent risk var...
Article
Full-text available
Importance Endometriosis is a common chronic gynecologic pathology with a large negative impact on women’s health. Beyond severe physical symptoms, endometriosis is also associated with several psychiatric comorbidities, including depression and anxiety. Objective To investigate whether pleiotropy contributes to the association of endometriosis wi...
Article
Importance Suicide is a leading cause of death; however, the molecular genetic basis of suicidal thoughts and behaviors (SITB) remains unknown. Objective To identify novel, replicable genomic risk loci for SITB. Design, Setting, and Participants This genome-wide association study included 633 778 US military veterans with and without SITB, as ide...
Article
Full-text available
The widespread comorbidity among psychiatric disorders demonstrated in epidemiological studies1–5 is mirrored by non-zero, positive genetic correlations from large-scale genetic studies6–10. To identify shared biological processes underpinning this observed phenotypic and genetic covariance and enhance molecular characterization of general psychiat...
Article
Full-text available
Cognitive deficits are known to be related to most forms of psychopathology. Here, we perform local genetic correlation analysis as a means of identifying independent segments of the genome that show biologically interpretable pleiotropic associations between cognitive dimensions and psychopathology. We identify collective segments of the genome, w...
Article
The Million Veteran Program (MVP) uses the posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms (PTSD) Checklist 17 (PCL-17) self-report to assess PTSD. Existing literature suggests that the five-factor dysphoric arousal model best represents the PTSD symptom clusters; this can be tested within MVP, one of the largest samples collected with suitable data. We com...
Article
Full-text available
Multiple psychiatric disorders have been associated with abnormalities in both the innate and adaptive immune systems. The role of these abnormalities in pathogenesis, and whether they are driven by psychiatric risk variants, remains unclear. We test for enrichment of GWAS variants associated with multiple psychiatric disorders (cross-disorder or t...
Article
Full-text available
Importance: Alcohol genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have generally focused on alcohol consumption and alcohol use disorder (AUD); few have examined habitual drinking behaviors like maximum habitual alcohol intake (MaxAlc). Objectives: To identify genetic loci associated with MaxAlc and to elucidate the genetic architecture across alcohol...
Preprint
Full-text available
Sleep duration has been linked to a wide range of negative health outcomes and to reduced life expectancy. We conducted genome-wide association studies of short (less than 6 hours) and long (more than 9 hours) sleep duration in adults of European, African, East Asian, and admixed-American ancestry from UK Biobank and the Million Veteran Program. In...
Preprint
Major depression (MD) is a common mental disorder and a leading cause of disability worldwide. We conducted a GWAS meta-analysis of more than 1.3 million individuals, including 371,184 with MD, identifying 243 risk loci. Sixty-four loci are novel, including glutamate and GABA receptors that are targets for antidepressant drugs. Several biological p...
Article
Full-text available
The association between coronary artery disease (CAD) and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) contributes to the high morbidity and mortality observed for these conditions. To understand the dynamics underlying PTSD-CAD comorbidity, we investigated large-scale genome-wide association (GWA) statistics from the Million Veteran Program (MVP), the UK...
Article
Full-text available
Alcohol’s impact on telomere length, a proposed marker of biological aging, is unclear. We performed the largest observational study to date (in n = 245,354 UK Biobank participants) and compared findings with Mendelian randomization (MR) estimates. Two-sample MR used data from 472,174 participants in a recent genome-wide association study (GWAS) of...
Article
Full-text available
Despite the large toll of opioid use disorder (OUD), genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of OUD to date have yielded few susceptibility loci. We performed a large-scale GWAS of OUD in individuals of European (EUR) and African (AFR) ancestry, optimizing genetic informativeness by performing MTAG (Multi-trait analysis of GWAS) with genetically cor...
Article
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Background Brain iron deposition has been linked to several neurodegenerative conditions and reported in alcohol dependence. Whether iron accumulation occurs in moderate drinkers is unknown. Our objectives were to investigate evidence in support of causal relationships between alcohol consumption and brain iron levels and to examine whether higher...
Article
Full-text available
Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified several risk loci for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD); however, how they confer PTSD risk remains unclear. We aimed to identify genes that confer PTSD risk through their effects on brain protein abundance to provide new insights into PTSD pathogenesis. To that end, we integrated human bra...
Article
Insomnia is a heritable, highly prevalent sleep disorder for which no sufficient treatment currently exists. Previous genome-wide association studies with up to 1.3 million subjects identified over 200 associated loci. This extreme polygenicity suggested that many more loci remain to be discovered. The current study almost doubled the sample size t...
Article
Importance: Certain psychiatric and immune-related disorders are reciprocal risk factors. However, the nature of these associations is unclear. Objective: To characterize the pleiotropy between psychiatric and immune-related traits, as well as risk factors of hypothesized relevance. Design, setting, and participants: This genetic association s...
Preprint
Full-text available
Importance Alcohol genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have generally focused on alcohol consumption and alcohol use disorder (AUD); few have examined habitual drinking behaviors like maximum habitual alcohol intake (MaxAlc). Objective Identify MaxAlc loci and elucidate the genetic architecture across alcohol traits. Design The MaxAlc GWAS was...
Presentation
Daniel Tylee gave an oral presentation characterizing results of an investigation of genetic correlations and causal inference effects (i.e., Mendelian randomization) between a large set of psychiatric and immune-related phenotypes, including allergic, autoimmune, inflammatory disorders, as well as a set of hypothesized confounding phenotypes (e.g....

Questions

Question (1)
Question
I admit I'm not familiar with non-parametric testing, but my hypothesis is specific to the direction of change between two groups, meaning the alternative hypothesis is specifically that group A is larger then group B, null is that they are equal. Furthermore the dependent variable is a frequency of occurrence, and I expect the group B frequency to approach 0. I see no reason not to employ a one-tailed test, but is this appropriate for this type of analysis?

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