Disease areas:
  • clinical signs and symptoms
  • mental health
Last updated:
Author(s):
Jin Chen, Yuning Zhang, Shu Liu, Miguel Garcia-Argibay, Tianye Jia, Jujiao Kang, Wei Li, Marco Solmi, Hongyi Sun, Wenqi Liu, Congying Chu, Samuele Cortese, Jiaojian Wang
Publish date:
18 November 2025
Journal:
Nature Communications
PubMed ID:
41253807

Abstract

Increasing evidence reveals the presence of multimorbidity across physical and mental disorders. A general disease factor (d factor) has been recently identified to capture the shared liability across these conditions, yet its biological basis remains poorly understood. Here, using data from the UK Biobank, we reveal the d factor’s neural, genetic, and environmental underpinnings. We show that the d factor is associated with extreme negative deviations in grey matter volume and white matter microstructure. A genome-wide association study identifies its genetic loci and correlations with unhealthy lifestyle, anthropometric measures, and mood-related phenotypes. Furthermore, Mendelian randomization suggests a causal effect of living environmental deprivation on the d factor. Mediation analysis further reveals that the d factor links this environmental adversity to individual differences in brain structure. Our findings establish a multi-level biological characterization of general disease liability, connecting environmental, genetic, and neural factors and inform transdiagnostic approaches to prevention and treatment.

Related projects

The coexistence of a variety of mental and physical diseases is referred to as multimorbidity. In recent years, the link between mental and physical illnesses…

Institution:
Kunming University of Science and Technology, China

All projects