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Nadine Norton

Researcher at University of Miami

Publications -  100
Citations -  17969

Nadine Norton is an academic researcher from University of Miami. The author has contributed to research in topics: Single-nucleotide polymorphism & Gene. The author has an hindex of 58, co-authored 100 publications receiving 17074 citations. Previous affiliations of Nadine Norton include University of Wales & Cardiff University.

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Common polygenic variation contributes to risk of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder

Shaun Purcell, +81 more
- 06 Aug 2009 - 
TL;DR: The extent to which common genetic variation underlies the risk of schizophrenia is shown, using two analytic approaches, and the major histocompatibility complex is implicate, which is shown to involve thousands of common alleles of very small effect.
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Genome-wide association study identifies five new schizophrenia loci

Stephan Ripke, +210 more
- 01 Oct 2011 - 
TL;DR: The authors examined the role of common genetic variation in schizophrenia in a genome-wide association study of substantial size: a stage 1 discovery sample of 21,856 individuals of European ancestry and a stage 2 replication sample of 29,839 independent subjects.
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Rare chromosomal deletions and duplications increase risk of schizophrenia

Jennifer Stone, +91 more
- 11 Sep 2008 - 
TL;DR: A genome-wide survey of rare CNVs in 3,391 patients with schizophrenia and 3,181 ancestrally matched controls provides strong support for a model of schizophrenia pathogenesis that includes the effects of multiple rare structural variants, both genome- wide and at specific loci.
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Identification of loci associated with schizophrenia by genome-wide association and follow-up

TL;DR: Meta-analysis provided strongest evidence for association around ZNF804A and this strengthened when the affected phenotype including bipolar disorder included bipolar disorder and the overall pattern of replication was unlikely to occur by chance.
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Support for the involvement of large copy number variants in the pathogenesis of schizophrenia

TL;DR: This study confirms the involvement of rare CNVs in the pathogenesis of schizophrenia and contributes to the growing list of specific CNVs that are implicated.