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Genome-wide association study identifies five new schizophrenia loci

Stephan Ripke, +210 more
- 01 Oct 2011 - 
- Vol. 43, Iss: 10, pp 969-976
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TLDR
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.
Abstract
We 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. The combined stage 1 and 2 analysis yielded genome-wide significant associations with schizophrenia for seven loci, five of which are new (1p21.3, 2q32.3, 8p23.2, 8q21.3 and 10q24.32-q24.33) and two of which have been previously implicated (6p21.32-p22.1 and 18q21.2). The strongest new finding (P = 1.6 x 10(-11)) was with rs1625579 within an intron of a putative primary transcript for MIR137 (microRNA 137), a known regulator of neuronal development. Four other schizophrenia loci achieving genome-wide significance contain predicted targets of MIR137, suggesting MIR137-mediated dysregulation as a previously unknown etiologic mechanism in schizophrenia. In a joint analysis with a bipolar disorder sample (16,374 affected individuals and 14,044 controls), three loci reached genome-wide significance: CACNA1C (rs4765905, P = 7.0 x 10(-9)), ANK3 (rs10994359, P = 2.5 x 10(-8)) and the ITIH3-ITIH4 region (rs2239547, P = 7.8 x 10(-9)).

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Citations
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How genome-wide association studies (GWAS) made traditional candidate gene studies obsolete.

TL;DR: Findings are summarized that convinced human genetics researchers that traditional candidate gene studies should no longer be trusted and a recent surge of fundamental discoveries in psychiatric genetics research are highlighted.
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The role of L-type voltage-gated calcium channels Cav1.2 and Cav1.3 in normal and pathological brain function

TL;DR: The use of specific activators and inhibitors that penetrate the central nervous system has suggested an essential functional role of L-type calcium channels in several important physiological processes of the brain, but the contribution of individual LTCCs and their polymorphisms to human brain function and diseases remains unclear.
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Aggrecan and chondroitin-6-sulfate abnormalities in schizophrenia and bipolar disorder: a postmortem study on the amygdala

TL;DR: These findings show disruption of multiple PNN populations in the amygdala of SZ and, more modestly, BD, suggesting that CSPG abnormalities may affect distinct glial cell populations and suggest a potential mechanism for PNN decreases.
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Genome-Wide Association Study of clinical dimensions of schizophrenia: polygenic effect on disorganized symptoms

TL;DR: The first genome-wide association study (GWAS) of dimensional symptom scores among individuals with schizophrenia is presented, finding the polygenic signal that has been observed in cross-sample analyses of schizophrenia GWAS data sets could be in part related to genetic effects on negative and disorganized symptoms.
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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.
Journal ArticleDOI

Common SNPs explain a large proportion of the heritability for human height

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