1,367 results on '"Hultman, Christina"'
Search Results
2. Investigating neonatal health risk variables through cell-type specific methylome-wide association studies
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Campbell, Thomas L., Xie, Lin Y., Johnson, Ralen H., Hultman, Christina M., van den Oord, Edwin J. C. G., and Aberg, Karolina A.
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- 2024
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3. Rare coding variants in ten genes confer substantial risk for schizophrenia.
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Singh, Tarjinder, Poterba, Timothy, Curtis, David, Akil, Huda, Al Eissa, Mariam, Barchas, Jack D, Bass, Nicholas, Bigdeli, Tim B, Breen, Gerome, Bromet, Evelyn J, Buckley, Peter F, Bunney, William E, Bybjerg-Grauholm, Jonas, Byerley, William F, Chapman, Sinéad B, Chen, Wei J, Churchhouse, Claire, Craddock, Nicholas, Cusick, Caroline M, DeLisi, Lynn, Dodge, Sheila, Escamilla, Michael A, Eskelinen, Saana, Fanous, Ayman H, Faraone, Stephen V, Fiorentino, Alessia, Francioli, Laurent, Gabriel, Stacey B, Gage, Diane, Gagliano Taliun, Sarah A, Ganna, Andrea, Genovese, Giulio, Glahn, David C, Grove, Jakob, Hall, Mei-Hua, Hämäläinen, Eija, Heyne, Henrike O, Holi, Matti, Hougaard, David M, Howrigan, Daniel P, Huang, Hailiang, Hwu, Hai-Gwo, Kahn, René S, Kang, Hyun Min, Karczewski, Konrad J, Kirov, George, Knowles, James A, Lee, Francis S, Lehrer, Douglas S, Lescai, Francesco, Malaspina, Dolores, Marder, Stephen R, McCarroll, Steven A, McIntosh, Andrew M, Medeiros, Helena, Milani, Lili, Morley, Christopher P, Morris, Derek W, Mortensen, Preben Bo, Myers, Richard M, Nordentoft, Merete, O'Brien, Niamh L, Olivares, Ana Maria, Ongur, Dost, Ouwehand, Willem H, Palmer, Duncan S, Paunio, Tiina, Quested, Digby, Rapaport, Mark H, Rees, Elliott, Rollins, Brandi, Satterstrom, F Kyle, Schatzberg, Alan, Scolnick, Edward, Scott, Laura J, Sharp, Sally I, Sklar, Pamela, Smoller, Jordan W, Sobell, Janet L, Solomonson, Matthew, Stahl, Eli A, Stevens, Christine R, Suvisaari, Jaana, Tiao, Grace, Watson, Stanley J, Watts, Nicholas A, Blackwood, Douglas H, Børglum, Anders D, Cohen, Bruce M, Corvin, Aiden P, Esko, Tõnu, Freimer, Nelson B, Glatt, Stephen J, Hultman, Christina M, McQuillin, Andrew, Palotie, Aarno, Pato, Carlos N, Pato, Michele T, Pulver, Ann E, and St Clair, David
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Humans ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Receptors ,N-Methyl-D-Aspartate ,Case-Control Studies ,Schizophrenia ,Mutation ,Exome ,Neurodevelopmental Disorders ,Human Genome ,Biotechnology ,Mental Health ,Neurosciences ,Brain Disorders ,Genetics ,Serious Mental Illness ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Mental health ,Neurological ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Rare coding variation has historically provided the most direct connections between gene function and disease pathogenesis. By meta-analysing the whole exomes of 24,248 schizophrenia cases and 97,322 controls, we implicate ultra-rare coding variants (URVs) in 10 genes as conferring substantial risk for schizophrenia (odds ratios of 3-50, P
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- 2022
4. Intelligence, educational attainment, and brain structure in those at familial high‐risk for schizophrenia or bipolar disorder
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Zwarte, Sonja MC, Brouwer, Rachel M, Agartz, Ingrid, Alda, Martin, Alonso‐Lana, Silvia, Bearden, Carrie E, Bertolino, Alessandro, Bonvino, Aurora, Bramon, Elvira, Buimer, Elizabeth EL, Cahn, Wiepke, Canales‐Rodríguez, Erick J, Cannon, Dara M, Cannon, Tyrone D, Caseras, Xavier, Castro‐Fornieles, Josefina, Chen, Qiang, Chung, Yoonho, De la Serna, Elena, Bonnin, Caterina Mar, Demro, Caroline, Di Giorgio, Annabella, Doucet, Gaelle E, Eker, Mehmet Cagdas, Erk, Susanne, Fatjó‐Vilas, Mar, Fears, Scott C, Foley, Sonya F, Frangou, Sophia, Fullerton, Janice M, Glahn, David C, Goghari, Vina M, Goikolea, Jose M, Goldman, Aaron L, Gonul, Ali Saffet, Gruber, Oliver, Hajek, Tomas, Hawkins, Emma L, Heinz, Andreas, Ongun, Ceren Hidiroglu, Hillegers, Manon HJ, Houenou, Josselin, Pol, Hilleke E Hulshoff, Hultman, Christina M, Ingvar, Martin, Johansson, Viktoria, Jönsson, Erik G, Kane, Fergus, Kempton, Matthew J, Koenis, Marinka MG, Kopecek, Miloslav, Krämer, Bernd, Lawrie, Stephen M, Lenroot, Rhoshel K, Marcelis, Machteld, Mattay, Venkata S, McDonald, Colm, Meyer‐Lindenberg, Andreas, Michielse, Stijn, Mitchell, Philip B, Moreno, Dolores, Murray, Robin M, Mwangi, Benson, Nabulsi, Leila, Newport, Jason, Olman, Cheryl A, Os, Jim, Overs, Bronwyn J, Ozerdem, Aysegul, Pergola, Giulio, Picchioni, Marco M, Piguet, Camille, Pomarol‐Clotet, Edith, Radua, Joaquim, Ramsay, Ian S, Richter, Anja, Roberts, Gloria, Salvador, Raymond, Aydogan, Aybala Saricicek, Sarró, Salvador, Schofield, Peter R, Simsek, Esma M, Simsek, Fatma, Soares, Jair C, Sponheim, Scott R, Sugranyes, Gisela, Toulopoulou, Timothea, Tronchin, Giulia, Vieta, Eduard, Walter, Henrik, Weinberger, Daniel R, Whalley, Heather C, Wu, Mon‐Ju, Yalin, Nefize, Andreassen, Ole A, Ching, Christopher RK, Thomopoulos, Sophia I, Erp, Theo GM, Jahanshad, Neda, and Thompson, Paul M
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Biological Psychology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Brain Disorders ,Bipolar Disorder ,Clinical Research ,Serious Mental Illness ,Neurosciences ,Schizophrenia ,Mental Health ,Aetiology ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Mental health ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,Educational Status ,Family ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Humans ,Intelligence ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Neuroimaging ,bipolar disorder ,education ,intelligence ,neuroimaging ,relatives ,schizophrenia ,Cognitive Sciences ,Experimental Psychology ,Biological psychology ,Cognitive and computational psychology - Abstract
First-degree relatives of patients diagnosed with schizophrenia (SZ-FDRs) show similar patterns of brain abnormalities and cognitive alterations to patients, albeit with smaller effect sizes. First-degree relatives of patients diagnosed with bipolar disorder (BD-FDRs) show divergent patterns; on average, intracranial volume is larger compared to controls, and findings on cognitive alterations in BD-FDRs are inconsistent. Here, we performed a meta-analysis of global and regional brain measures (cortical and subcortical), current IQ, and educational attainment in 5,795 individuals (1,103 SZ-FDRs, 867 BD-FDRs, 2,190 controls, 942 schizophrenia patients, 693 bipolar patients) from 36 schizophrenia and/or bipolar disorder family cohorts, with standardized methods. Compared to controls, SZ-FDRs showed a pattern of widespread thinner cortex, while BD-FDRs had widespread larger cortical surface area. IQ was lower in SZ-FDRs (d = -0.42, p = 3 × 10-5 ), with weak evidence of IQ reductions among BD-FDRs (d = -0.23, p = .045). Both relative groups had similar educational attainment compared to controls. When adjusting for IQ or educational attainment, the group-effects on brain measures changed, albeit modestly. Changes were in the expected direction, with less pronounced brain abnormalities in SZ-FDRs and more pronounced effects in BD-FDRs. To conclude, SZ-FDRs and BD-FDRs show a differential pattern of structural brain abnormalities. In contrast, both had lower IQ scores and similar school achievements compared to controls. Given that brain differences between SZ-FDRs and BD-FDRs remain after adjusting for IQ or educational attainment, we suggest that differential brain developmental processes underlying predisposition for schizophrenia or bipolar disorder are likely independent of general cognitive impairment.
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- 2022
5. Investigating rare pathogenic/likely pathogenic exonic variation in bipolar disorder.
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Jia, Xiaoming, Goes, Fernando S, Locke, Adam E, Palmer, Duncan, Wang, Weiqing, Cohen-Woods, Sarah, Genovese, Giulio, Jackson, Anne U, Jiang, Chen, Kvale, Mark, Mullins, Niamh, Nguyen, Hoang, Pirooznia, Mehdi, Rivera, Margarita, Ruderfer, Douglas M, Shen, Ling, Thai, Khanh, Zawistowski, Matthew, Zhuang, Yongwen, Abecasis, Gonçalo, Akil, Huda, Bergen, Sarah, Burmeister, Margit, Chapman, Sinéad, DelaBastide, Melissa, Juréus, Anders, Kang, Hyun Min, Kwok, Pui-Yan, Li, Jun Z, Levy, Shawn E, Monson, Eric T, Moran, Jennifer, Sobell, Janet, Watson, Stanley, Willour, Virginia, Zöllner, Sebastian, Adolfsson, Rolf, Blackwood, Douglas, Boehnke, Michael, Breen, Gerome, Corvin, Aiden, Craddock, Nick, DiFlorio, Arianna, Hultman, Christina M, Landen, Mikael, Lewis, Cathryn, McCarroll, Steven A, Richard McCombie, W, McGuffin, Peter, McIntosh, Andrew, McQuillin, Andrew, Morris, Derek, Myers, Richard M, O'Donovan, Michael, Ophoff, Roel, Boks, Marco, Kahn, Rene, Ouwehand, Willem, Owen, Michael, Pato, Carlos, Pato, Michele, Posthuma, Danielle, Potash, James B, Reif, Andreas, Sklar, Pamela, Smoller, Jordan, Sullivan, Patrick F, Vincent, John, Walters, James, Neale, Benjamin, Purcell, Shaun, Risch, Neil, Schaefer, Catherine, Stahl, Eli A, Zandi, Peter P, and Scott, Laura J
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Humans ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Bipolar Disorder ,Schizophrenia ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,Genetic Variation ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Exome ,Brain Disorders ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Human Genome ,Serious Mental Illness ,Genetics ,Mental Health ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Mental health ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Psychiatry - Abstract
Bipolar disorder (BD) is a serious mental illness with substantial common variant heritability. However, the role of rare coding variation in BD is not well established. We examined the protein-coding (exonic) sequences of 3,987 unrelated individuals with BD and 5,322 controls of predominantly European ancestry across four cohorts from the Bipolar Sequencing Consortium (BSC). We assessed the burden of rare, protein-altering, single nucleotide variants classified as pathogenic or likely pathogenic (P-LP) both exome-wide and within several groups of genes with phenotypic or biologic plausibility in BD. While we observed an increased burden of rare coding P-LP variants within 165 genes identified as BD GWAS regions in 3,987 BD cases (meta-analysis OR = 1.9, 95% CI = 1.3-2.8, one-sided p = 6.0 × 10-4), this enrichment did not replicate in an additional 9,929 BD cases and 14,018 controls (OR = 0.9, one-side p = 0.70). Although BD shares common variant heritability with schizophrenia, in the BSC sample we did not observe a significant enrichment of P-LP variants in SCZ GWAS genes, in two classes of neuronal synaptic genes (RBFOX2 and FMRP) associated with SCZ or in loss-of-function intolerant genes. In this study, the largest analysis of exonic variation in BD, individuals with BD do not carry a replicable enrichment of rare P-LP variants across the exome or in any of several groups of genes with biologic plausibility. Moreover, despite a strong shared susceptibility between BD and SCZ through common genetic variation, we do not observe an association between BD risk and rare P-LP coding variants in genes known to modulate risk for SCZ.
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- 2021
6. Genes implicated by a methylome-wide schizophrenia study in neonatal blood show differential expression in adult brain samples
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van den Oord, Edwin J. C. G., Xie, Lin Y., Zhao, Min, Campbell, Thomas L., Turecki, Gustavo, Kähler, Anna K., Dean, Brian, Mors, Ole, Hultman, Christina M., Staunstrup, Nicklas H., and Aberg, Karolina A.
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- 2023
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7. Rare tandem repeat expansions associate with genes involved in synaptic and neuronal signaling functions in schizophrenia
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Wen, Jia, Trost, Brett, Engchuan, Worrawat, Halvorsen, Matthew, Pallotto, Linda M., Mitina, Aleksandra, Ancalade, NaEshia, Farrell, Martilias, Backstrom, Ian, Guo, Keyi, Pellecchia, Giovanna, Thiruvahindrapuram, Bhooma, Giusti-Rodriguez, Paola, Rosen, Jonathan David, Li, Yun, Won, Hyejung, Magnusson, Patrik K. E., Gyllensten, Ulf, Bassett, Anne S., Hultman, Christina M., Sullivan, Patrick F., Yuen, Ryan K. C., and Szatkiewicz, Jin P.
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- 2023
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8. Schizophrenia-associated somatic copy-number variants from 12,834 cases reveal recurrent NRXN1 and ABCB11 disruptions
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Marshall, Christian R., Merico, Daniele, Thiruvahindrapuram, Bhooma, Wang, Zhouzhi, Scherer, Stephen W., Howrigan, Daniel P, Ripke, Stephan, Bulik-Sullivan, Brendan, Farh, Kai-How, Fromer, Menachem, Goldstein, Jacqueline I., Huang, Hailiang, Lee, Phil, Daly, Mark J., Neale, Benjamin M., Belliveau, Richard A., Jr., Bergen, Sarah E., Bevilacqua, Elizabeth, Chambert, Kimberley D., O'Dushlaine, Colm, Scolnick, Edward M., Smoller, Jordan W., Moran, Jennifer L., Palotie, Aarno, Petryshen, Tracey L., Wu, Wenting, Greer, Douglas S., Antaki, Danny, Shetty, Aniket, Gujral, Madhusudan, Brandler, William M., Malhotra, Dheeraj, Fuentes Fajarado, Karin V., Maile, Michelle S., Holmans, Peter A., Carrera, Noa, Craddock, Nick, Escott-Price, Valentina, Georgieva, Lyudmila, Hamshere, Marian L., Kavanagh, David, Legge, Sophie E., Pocklington, Andrew J., Richards, Alexander L., Ruderfer, Douglas M., Williams, Nigel M., Kirov, George, Owen, Michael J., Pinto, Dalila, Cai, Guiqing, Davis, Kenneth L., Drapeau, Elodie, Friedman, Joseph I, Haroutunian, Vahram, Parkhomenko, Elena, Reichenberg, Abraham, Silverman, Jeremy M., Buxbaum, Joseph D., Domenici, Enrico, Agartz, Ingrid, Djurovic, Srdjan, Mattingsdal, Morten, Melle, Ingrid, Andreassen, Ole A., Jönsson, Erik G., Söderman, Erik, Albus, Margot, Alexander, Madeline, Laurent, Claudine, Levinson, Douglas F., Amin, Farooq, Atkins, Joshua, Cairns, Murray J., Scott, Rodney J., Tooney, Paul A., Wu, Jing Qin, Bacanu, Silviu A., Bigdeli, Tim B., Reimers, Mark A., Webb, Bradley T., Wolen, Aaron R., Wormley, Brandon K., Kendler, Kenneth S., Riley, Brien P., Kähler, Anna K., Magnusson, Patrik K.E., Hultman, Christina M., Bertalan, Marcelo, Hansen, Thomas, Olsen, Line, Rasmussen, Henrik B., Werge, Thomas, Mattheisen, Manuel, Black, Donald W., Bruggeman, Richard, Buccola, Nancy G., Buckner, Randy L., Roffman, Joshua L., Byerley, William, Cahn, Wiepke, Kahn, René S, Strengman, Eric, Ophoff, Roel A., Carr, Vaughan J., Catts, Stanley V., Henskens, Frans A., Loughland, Carmel M., Michie, Patricia T., Pantelis, Christos, Schall, Ulrich, Jablensky, Assen V., Kelly, Brian J., Campion, Dominique, Cantor, Rita M., Cheng, Wei, Cloninger, C. Robert, Svrakic, Dragan M, Cohen, David, Cormican, Paul, Donohoe, Gary, Morris, Derek W., Corvin, Aiden, Gill, Michael, Crespo-Facorro, Benedicto, Crowley, James J., Farrell, Martilias S., Giusti-Rodríguez, Paola, Kim, Yunjung, Szatkiewicz, Jin P., Williams, Stephanie, Curtis, David, Pimm, Jonathan, Gurling, Hugh, McQuillin, Andrew, Davidson, Michael, Weiser, Mark, Degenhardt, Franziska, Forstner, Andreas J., Herms, Stefan, Hoffmann, Per, Hofman, Andrea, Cichon, Sven, Nöthen, Markus M., Del Favero, Jurgen, DeLisi, Lynn E., McCarley, Robert W., Levy, Deborah L., Mesholam-Gately, Raquelle I., Seidman, Larry J., Dikeos, Dimitris, Papadimitriou, George N., Dinan, Timothy, Duan, Jubao, Sanders, Alan R., Gejman, Pablo V., Gershon, Elliot S., Dudbridge, Frank, Eichhammer, Peter, Eriksson, Johan, Salomaa, Veikko, Essioux, Laurent, Fanous, Ayman H., Knowles, James A., Pato, Michele T., Pato, Carlos N., Frank, Josef, Meier, Sandra, Schulze, Thomas G., Strohmaier, Jana, Witt, Stephanie H., Rietschel, Marcella, Franke, Lude, Karjalainen, Juha, Freedman, Robert, Olincy, Ann, Freimer, Nelson B., Purcell, Shaun M., Roussos, Panos, Stahl, Eli A., Sklar, Pamela, Giegling, Ina, Hartmann, Annette M., Konte, Bettina, Rujescu, Dan, Godard, Stephanie, Hirschhorn, Joel N., Pers, Tune H., Price, Alkes, Esko, Tõnu, Gratten, Jacob, Lee, S. Hong, Visscher, Peter M., Wray, Naomi R., Mowry, Bryan J., de Haan, Lieuwe, Meijer, Carin J., Hansen, Mark, Ikeda, Masashi, Iwata, Nakao, Joa, Inge, Kalaydjieva, Luba, Keller, Matthew C., Kennedy, James L., Zai, Clement C., Knight, Jo, Lerer, Bernard, Liang, Kung-Yee, Lieberman, Jeffrey, Stroup, T. Scott, Lönnqvist, Jouko, Suvisaari, Jaana, Maher, Brion S., Maier, Wolfgang, Mallet, Jacques, McDonald, Colm, McIntosh, Andrew M., Blackwood, Douglas H.R., Metspalu, Andres, Milani, Lili, Milanova, Vihra, Mokrab, Younes, Collier, David A., Müller-Myhsok, Bertram, Murphy, Kieran C., Murray, Robin M., Powell, John, Myin-Germeys, Inez, Van Os, Jim, Nenadic, Igor, Nertney, Deborah A., Nestadt, Gerald, Pulver, Ann E., Nicodemus, Kristin K., Nisenbaum, Laura, Nordin, Annelie, Adolfsson, Rolf, O'Callaghan, Eadbhard, Oh, Sang-Yun, O'Neill, F. Anthony, Paunio, Tiina, Pietiläinen, Olli, Perkins, Diana O., Quested, Digby, Savitz, Adam, Li, Qingqin S., Schwab, Sibylle G., Shi, Jianxin, Spencer, Chris C.A., Thirumalai, Srinivas, Veijola, Juha, Waddington, John, Walsh, Dermot, Wildenauer, Dieter B., Bramon, Elvira, Darvasi, Ariel, Posthuma, Danielle, St. Clair, David, Shanta, Omar, Klein, Marieke, Park, Peter J., Weinberger, Daniel, Moran, John V., Gage, Fred H., Vaccarino, Flora M., Gleeson, Joseph, Mathern, Gary, Courchesne, Eric, Roy, Subhojit, Bizzotto, Sara, Coulter, Michael, Dias, Caroline, D'Gama, Alissa, Ganz, Javier, Hill, Robert, Huang, August Yue, Khoshkhoo, Sattar, Kim, Sonia, Lodato, Michael, Miller, Michael, Borges-Monroy, Rebeca, Rodin, Rachel, Zhou, Zinan, Bohrson, Craig, Chu, Chong, Cortes-Ciriano, Isidro, Dou, Yanmei, Galor, Alon, Gulhan, Doga, Kwon, Minseok, Luquette, Joe, Viswanadham, Vinay, Jones, Attila, Rosenbluh, Chaggai, Cho, Sean, Langmead, Ben, Thorpe, Jeremy, Erwin, Jennifer, Jaffe, Andrew, McConnell, Michael, Narurkar, Rujuta, Paquola, Apua, Shin, Jooheon, Straub, Richard, Abyzov, Alexej, Bae, Taejeong, Jang, Yeongjun, Wang, Yifan, Gage, Fred, Linker, Sara, Reed, Patrick, Wang, Meiyan, Urban, Alexander, Zhou, Bo, Zhu, Xiaowei, Pattni, Reenal, Amero, Aitor Serres, Juan, David, Lobon, Irene, Marques-Bonet, Tomas, Moruno, Manuel Solis, Perez, Raquel Garcia, Povolotskaya, Inna, Soriano, Eduardo, Averbuj, Dan, Ball, Laurel, Breuss, Martin, Yang, Xiaoxu, Chung, Changuk, Emery, Sarah B., Flasch, Diane A., Kidd, Jeffrey M., Kopera, Huira C., Kwan, Kenneth Y., Mills, Ryan E., Moldovan, John B., Sun, Chen, Zhao, Xuefang, Zhou, Weichen, Frisbie, Trenton J., Cherskov, Adriana, Fasching, Liana, Jourdon, Alexandre, Pochareddy, Sirisha, Scuderi, Soraya, Sestan, Nenad, Maury, Eduardo A., Sherman, Maxwell A., Genovese, Giulio, Gilgenast, Thomas G., Kamath, Tushar, Burris, S.J., Rajarajan, Prashanth, Flaherty, Erin, Akbarian, Schahram, Chess, Andrew, McCarroll, Steven A., Loh, Po-Ru, Phillips-Cremins, Jennifer E., Brennand, Kristen J., Macosko, Evan Z., Walters, James T.R., O’Donovan, Michael, Sullivan, Patrick, Sebat, Jonathan, Lee, Eunjung A., and Walsh, Christopher A.
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Publisher Correction: Rates, distribution and implications of postzygotic mosaic mutations in autism spectrum disorder
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Lim, Elaine T, Uddin, Mohammed, De Rubeis, Silvia, Chan, Yingleong, Kamumbu, Anne S, Zhang, Xiaochang, D’Gama, Alissa M, Kim, Sonia N, Hill, Robert Sean, Goldberg, Arthur P, Poultney, Christopher, Minshew, Nancy J, Kushima, Itaru, Aleksic, Branko, Ozaki, Norio, Parellada, Mara, Arango, Celso, Penzol, Maria J, Carracedo, Angel, Kolevzon, Alexander, Hultman, Christina M, Weiss, Lauren A, Fromer, Menachem, Chiocchetti, Andreas G, Freitag, Christine M, Church, George M, Scherer, Stephen W, Buxbaum, Joseph D, and Walsh, Christopher A
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Biological Psychology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Neurosciences ,Psychology ,Autism Sequencing Consortium ,Cognitive Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Biological psychology - Abstract
An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.
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- 2020
10. Large-Scale Exome Sequencing Study Implicates Both Developmental and Functional Changes in the Neurobiology of Autism
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Satterstrom, F Kyle, Kosmicki, Jack A, Wang, Jiebiao, Breen, Michael S, De Rubeis, Silvia, An, Joon-Yong, Peng, Minshi, Collins, Ryan, Grove, Jakob, Klei, Lambertus, Stevens, Christine, Reichert, Jennifer, Mulhern, Maureen S, Artomov, Mykyta, Gerges, Sherif, Sheppard, Brooke, Xu, Xinyi, Bhaduri, Aparna, Norman, Utku, Brand, Harrison, Schwartz, Grace, Nguyen, Rachel, Guerrero, Elizabeth E, Dias, Caroline, Consortium, Autism Sequencing, Aleksic, Branko, Anney, Richard, Barbosa, Mafalda, Bishop, Somer, Brusco, Alfredo, Bybjerg-Grauholm, Jonas, Carracedo, Angel, Chan, Marcus CY, Chiocchetti, Andreas G, Chung, Brian HY, Coon, Hilary, Cuccaro, Michael L, Curró, Aurora, Bernardina, Bernardo Dalla, Doan, Ryan, Domenici, Enrico, Dong, Shan, Fallerini, Chiara, Fernández-Prieto, Montserrat, Ferrero, Giovanni Battista, Freitag, Christine M, Fromer, Menachem, Gargus, J Jay, Geschwind, Daniel, Giorgio, Elisa, González-Peñas, Javier, Guter, Stephen, Halpern, Danielle, Hansen-Kiss, Emily, He, Xin, Herman, Gail E, Hertz-Picciotto, Irva, Hougaard, David M, Hultman, Christina M, Ionita-Laza, Iuliana, Jacob, Suma, Jamison, Jesslyn, Jugessur, Astanand, Kaartinen, Miia, Knudsen, Gun Peggy, Kolevzon, Alexander, Kushima, Itaru, Lee, So Lun, Lehtimäki, Terho, Lim, Elaine T, Lintas, Carla, Lipkin, W Ian, Lopergolo, Diego, Lopes, Fátima, Ludena, Yunin, Maciel, Patricia, Magnus, Per, Mahjani, Behrang, Maltman, Nell, Manoach, Dara S, Meiri, Gal, Menashe, Idan, Miller, Judith, Minshew, Nancy, Montenegro, Eduarda MS, Moreira, Danielle, Morrow, Eric M, Mors, Ole, Mortensen, Preben Bo, Mosconi, Matthew, Muglia, Pierandrea, Neale, Benjamin M, Nordentoft, Merete, Ozaki, Norio, Palotie, Aarno, Parellada, Mara, Passos-Bueno, Maria Rita, Pericak-Vance, Margaret, Persico, Antonio M, and Pessah, Isaac
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Biological Sciences ,Bioinformatics and Computational Biology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Genetics ,Brain Disorders ,Mental Health ,Pediatric ,Human Genome ,Clinical Research ,Autism ,Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (IDD) ,Neurosciences ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Mental health ,Neurological ,Autistic Disorder ,Case-Control Studies ,Cell Lineage ,Cerebral Cortex ,Cohort Studies ,Exome ,Female ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Developmental ,Gene Frequency ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Humans ,Male ,Mutation ,Missense ,Neurobiology ,Neurons ,Phenotype ,Sex Factors ,Single-Cell Analysis ,Exome Sequencing ,Autism Sequencing Consortium ,iPSYCH-Broad Consortium ,autism spectrum disorder ,cell type ,cytoskeleton ,excitatory neurons ,excitatory-inhibitory balance ,exome sequencing ,genetics ,inhibitory neurons ,liability ,neurodevelopment ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Developmental Biology ,Biological sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences - Abstract
We present the largest exome sequencing study of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) to date (n = 35,584 total samples, 11,986 with ASD). Using an enhanced analytical framework to integrate de novo and case-control rare variation, we identify 102 risk genes at a false discovery rate of 0.1 or less. Of these genes, 49 show higher frequencies of disruptive de novo variants in individuals ascertained to have severe neurodevelopmental delay, whereas 53 show higher frequencies in individuals ascertained to have ASD; comparing ASD cases with mutations in these groups reveals phenotypic differences. Expressed early in brain development, most risk genes have roles in regulation of gene expression or neuronal communication (i.e., mutations effect neurodevelopmental and neurophysiological changes), and 13 fall within loci recurrently hit by copy number variants. In cells from the human cortex, expression of risk genes is enriched in excitatory and inhibitory neuronal lineages, consistent with multiple paths to an excitatory-inhibitory imbalance underlying ASD.
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- 2020
11. Using brain cell-type-specific protein interactomes to interpret neurodevelopmental genetic signals in schizophrenia
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Ripke, Stephan, Neale, Benjamin M., Corvin, Aiden, Walters, James T.R., Farh, Kai-How, Holmans, Peter A., Lee, Phil, Bulik-Sullivan, Brendan, Collier, David A., Huang, Hailiang, Pers, Tune H., Agartz, Ingrid, Agerbo, Esben, Albus, Margot, Alexander, Madeline, Amin, Farooq, Bacanu, Silviu A., Begemann, Martin, Belliveau, Richard A., Jr., Bene, Judit, Bergen, Sarah E., Bevilacqua, Elizabeth, Bigdeli, Tim B., Black, Donald W., Bruggeman, Richard, Buccola, Nancy G., Buckner, Randy L., Byerley, William, Cahn, Wiepke, Cai, Guiqing, Campion, Dominique, Cantor, Rita M., Carr, Vaughan J., Carrera, Noa, Catts, Stanley V., Chambert, Kimberley D., Chan, Raymond C.K., Chan, Ronald Y.L., Chen, Eric Y.H., Cheng, Wei, Cheung, Eric FC., Chong, Siow Ann, Cloninger, C. Robert, Cohen, David, Cohen, Nadine, Cormican, Paul, Craddock, Nick, Crowley, James J., Curtis, David, Davidson, Michael, Davis, Kenneth L., Degenhardt, Franziska, Del Favero, Jurgen, Demontis, Ditte, Dikeos, Dimitris, Dinan, Timothy, Djurovic, Srdjan, Donohoe, Gary, Drapeau, Elodie, Duan, Jubao, Dudbridge, Frank, Durmishi, Naser, Eichhammer, Peter, Eriksson, Johan, Escott-Price, Valentina, Essioux, Laurent, Fanous, Ayman H., Farrell, Martilias S., Frank, Josef, Franke, Lude, Freedman, Robert, Freimer, Nelson B., Friedl, Marion, Friedman, Joseph I., Fromer, Menachem, Genovese, Giulio, Georgieva, Lyudmila, Giegling, Ina, Giusti-Rodríguez, Paola, Godard, Stephanie, Goldstein, Jacqueline I., Golimbet, Vera, Gopal, Srihari, Gratten, Jacob, de Haan, Lieuwe, Hammer, Christian, Hamshere, Marian L., Hansen, Mark, Hansen, Thomas, Haroutunian, Vahram, Hartmann, Annette M., Henskens, Frans A., Herms, Stefan, Hirschhorn, Joel N., Hoffmann, Per, Hofman, Andrea, Hollegaard, Mads V., Hougaard, David M., Ikeda, Masashi, Joa, Inge, Julià, Antonio, Kahn, René S., Kalaydjieva, Luba, Karachanak-Yankova, Sena, Karjalainen, Juha, Kavanagh, David, Keller, Matthew C., Kennedy, James L., Khrunin, Andrey, Kim, Yunjung, Klovins, Janis, Knowles, James A., Konte, Bettina, Kucinskas, Vaidutis, Kucinskiene, Zita Ausrele, Kuzelova-Ptackova, Hana, Kähler, Anna K., Laurent, Claudine, Lee, Jimmy, Lee, S. Hong, Legge, Sophie E., Lerer, Bernard, Li, Miaoxin, Li, Tao, Liang, Kung-Yee, Lieberman, Jeffrey, Limborska, Svetlana, Loughland, Carmel M., Lubinski, Jan, Lönnqvist, Jouko, Macek, Milan, Magnusson, Patrik K.E., Maher, Brion S., Maier, Wolfgang, Mallet, Jacques, Marsal, Sara, Mattheisen, Manuel, Mattingsdal, Morten, McCarley, Robert W., McDonald, Colm, McIntosh, Andrew M., Meier, Sandra, Meijer, Carin J., Melegh, Bela, Melle, Ingrid, Mesholam-Gately, Raquelle I., Metspalu, Andres, Michie, Patricia T., Milani, Lili, Milanova, Vihra, Mokrab, Younes, Morris, Derek W., Mors, Ole, Murphy, Kieran C., Murray, Robin M., Myin-Germeys, Inez, Müller-Myhsok, Bertram, Nelis, Mari, Nenadic, Igor, Nertney, Deborah A., Nestadt, Gerald, Nicodemus, Kristin K., Nikitina-Zake, Liene, Nisenbaum, Laura, Nordin, Annelie, O'Callaghan, Eadbhard, O'Dushlaine, Colm, O'Neill, F. Anthony, Oh, Sang-Yun, Olincy, Ann, Olsen, Line, Van Os, Jim, Pantelis, Christos, Papadimitriou, George N., Papiol, Sergi, Parkhomenko, Elena, Pato, Michele T., Paunio, Tiina, Pejovic-Milovancevic, Milica, Perkins, Diana O., Pietiläinen, Olli, Pimm, Jonathan, Pocklington, Andrew J., Powell, John, Price, Alkes, Pulver, Ann E., Purcell, Shaun M., Quested, Digby, Rasmussen, Henrik B., Reichenberg, Abraham, Reimers, Mark A., Richards, Alexander L., Roffman, Joshua L., Roussos, Panos, Ruderfer, Douglas M., Salomaa, Veikko, Sanders, Alan R., Schall, Ulrich, Schubert, Christian R., Schulze, Thomas G., Schwab, Sibylle G., Scolnick, Edward M., Scott, Rodney J., Seidman, Larry J., Shi, Jianxin, Sigurdsson, Engilbert, Silagadze, Teimuraz, Silverman, Jeremy M., Sim, Kang, Slominsky, Petr, Smoller, Jordan W., So, Hon-Cheong, Spencer, Chris C.A., Stahl, Eli A., Stefansson, Hreinn, Steinberg, Stacy, Stogmann, Elisabeth, Straub, Richard E., Strengman, Eric, Strohmaier, Jana, Stroup, T Scott, Subramaniam, Mythily, Suvisaari, Jaana, Svrakic, Dragan M., Szatkiewicz, Jin P., Söderman, Erik, Thirumalai, Srinivas, Toncheva, Draga, Tosato, Sarah, Veijola, Juha, Waddington, John, Walsh, Dermot, Wang, Dai, Wang, Qiang, Webb, Bradley T., Weiser, Mark, Wildenauer, Dieter B., Williams, Nigel M., Williams, Stephanie, Witt, Stephanie H., Wolen, Aaron R., Wong, Emily H.M., Wormley, Brandon K., Xi, Hualin Simon, Zai, Clement C., Zheng, Xuebin, Zimprich, Fritz, Wray, Naomi R., Stefansson, Kari, Visscher, Peter M., Adolfsson, Rolf, Andreassen, Ole A., Blackwood, Douglas H.R., Bramon, Elvira, Buxbaum, Joseph D., Børglum, Anders D., Cichon, Sven, Darvasi, Ariel, Domenici, Enrico, Ehrenreich, Hannelore, Esko, Tõnu, Gejman, Pablo V., Gill, Michael, Gurling, Hugh, Hultman, Christina M., Iwata, Nakao, Jablensky, Assen V., Jönsson, Erik G., Kendler, Kenneth S., Kirov, George, Knight, Jo, Lencz, Todd, Levinson, Douglas F., Li, Qingqin S., Liu, Jianjun, Malhotra, Anil K., McCarroll, Steven A., McQuillin, Andrew, Moran, Jennifer L., Mortensen, Preben B., Mowry, Bryan J., Nöthen, Markus M., Ophoff, Roel A., Owen, Michael J., Palotie, Aarno, Pato, Carlos N., Petryshen, Tracey L., Posthuma, Danielle, Rietschel, Marcella, Riley, Brien P., Rujescu, Dan, Sham, Pak C., Sklar, Pamela, St Clair, David, Weinberger, Daniel R., Wendland, Jens R., Werge, Thomas, Daly, Mark J., Sullivan, Patrick F., O'Donovan, Michael C., Qin, Shengying, Sawa, Akira, Kahn, Rene, Hong, Kyung Sue, Shi, Wenzhao, Tsuang, Ming, Itokawa, Masanari, Feng, Gang, Glatt, Stephen J., Ma, Xiancang, Tang, Jinsong, Ruan, Yunfeng, Liu, Ruize, Zhu, Feng, Horiuchi, Yasue, Lee, Byung Dae, Joo, Eun-Jeong, Myung, Woojae, Ha, Kyooseob, Won, Hong-Hee, Baek, Ji Hyung, Chung, Young Chul, Kim, Sung-Wan, Kusumawardhani, Agung, Chen, Wei J., Hwu, Hai-Gwo, Hishimoto, Akitoyo, Otsuka, Ikuo, Sora, Ichiro, Toyota, Tomoko, Yoshikawa, Takeo, Kunugi, Hiroshi, Hattori, Kotaro, Ishiwata, Sayuri, Numata, Shusuke, Ohmori, Tetsuro, Arai, Makoto, Ozeki, Yuji, Fujii, Kumiko, Kim, Se Joo, Lee, Heon-Jeong, Ahn, Yong Min, Kim, Se Hyun, Akiyama, Kazufumi, Shimoda, Kazutaka, Kinoshita, Makoto, Hsu, Yu-Han H., Pintacuda, Greta, Nacu, Eugeniu, Kim, April, Tsafou, Kalliopi, Petrossian, Natalie, Crotty, William, Suh, Jung Min, Riseman, Jackson, Martin, Jacqueline M., Biagini, Julia C., Mena, Daya, Ching, Joshua K.T., Malolepsza, Edyta, Li, Taibo, Singh, Tarjinder, Ge, Tian, Egri, Shawn B., Tanenbaum, Benjamin, Stanclift, Caroline R., Apffel, Annie M., Carr, Steven A., Schenone, Monica, Jaffe, Jake, Fornelos, Nadine, Eggan, Kevin C., and Lage, Kasper
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- 2023
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12. Psychometric properties of the Swedish translation of the Obsessive–Compulsive Inventory-Revised and the population characteristics of the symptom dimensions of OCD
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Mahjani, Behrang, Gustavsson Mahjani, Christina, Reichenberg, Abraham, Sandin, Sven, Hultman, Christina M., Buxbaum, Joseph D., and Grice, Dorothy E.
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- 2022
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13. The Association Between Familial Risk and Brain Abnormalities Is Disease Specific: An ENIGMA-Relatives Study of Schizophrenia and Bipolar Disorder
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de Zwarte, Sonja MC, Brouwer, Rachel M, Agartz, Ingrid, Alda, Martin, Aleman, André, Alpert, Kathryn I, Bearden, Carrie E, Bertolino, Alessandro, Bois, Catherine, Bonvino, Aurora, Bramon, Elvira, Buimer, Elizabeth EL, Cahn, Wiepke, Cannon, Dara M, Cannon, Tyrone D, Caseras, Xavier, Castro-Fornieles, Josefina, Chen, Qiang, Chung, Yoonho, De la Serna, Elena, Di Giorgio, Annabella, Doucet, Gaelle E, Eker, Mehmet Cagdas, Erk, Susanne, Fears, Scott C, Foley, Sonya F, Frangou, Sophia, Frankland, Andrew, Fullerton, Janice M, Glahn, David C, Goghari, Vina M, Goldman, Aaron L, Gonul, Ali Saffet, Gruber, Oliver, de Haan, Lieuwe, Hajek, Tomas, Hawkins, Emma L, Heinz, Andreas, Hillegers, Manon HJ, Pol, Hilleke E Hulshoff, Hultman, Christina M, Ingvar, Martin, Johansson, Viktoria, Jönsson, Erik G, Kane, Fergus, Kempton, Matthew J, Koenis, Marinka MG, Kopecek, Miloslav, Krabbendam, Lydia, Krämer, Bernd, Lawrie, Stephen M, Lenroot, Rhoshel K, Marcelis, Machteld, Marsman, Jan-Bernard C, Mattay, Venkata S, McDonald, Colm, Meyer-Lindenberg, Andreas, Michielse, Stijn, Mitchell, Philip B, Moreno, Dolores, Murray, Robin M, Mwangi, Benson, Najt, Pablo, Neilson, Emma, Newport, Jason, van Os, Jim, Overs, Bronwyn, Ozerdem, Aysegul, Picchioni, Marco M, Richter, Anja, Roberts, Gloria, Aydogan, Aybala Saricicek, Schofield, Peter R, Simsek, Fatma, Soares, Jair C, Sugranyes, Gisela, Toulopoulou, Timothea, Tronchin, Giulia, Walter, Henrik, Wang, Lei, Weinberger, Daniel R, Whalley, Heather C, Yalin, Nefize, Andreassen, Ole A, Ching, Christopher RK, van Erp, Theo GM, Turner, Jessica A, Jahanshad, Neda, Thompson, Paul M, Kahn, René S, and van Haren, Neeltje EM
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Biological Psychology ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Mental Health ,Brain Disorders ,Serious Mental Illness ,Schizophrenia ,Genetics ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Research ,Bipolar Disorder ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Mental health ,Adult ,Brain ,Cohort Studies ,Female ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Young Adult ,Bipolar disorder ,Familial risk ,Imaging ,Meta-analysis ,Neurodevelopment ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Psychiatry ,Biological sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundSchizophrenia and bipolar disorder share genetic liability, and some structural brain abnormalities are common to both conditions. First-degree relatives of patients with schizophrenia (FDRs-SZ) show similar brain abnormalities to patients, albeit with smaller effect sizes. Imaging findings in first-degree relatives of patients with bipolar disorder (FDRs-BD) have been inconsistent in the past, but recent studies report regionally greater volumes compared with control subjects.MethodsWe performed a meta-analysis of global and subcortical brain measures of 6008 individuals (1228 FDRs-SZ, 852 FDRs-BD, 2246 control subjects, 1016 patients with schizophrenia, 666 patients with bipolar disorder) from 34 schizophrenia and/or bipolar disorder family cohorts with standardized methods. Analyses were repeated with a correction for intracranial volume (ICV) and for the presence of any psychopathology in the relatives and control subjects.ResultsFDRs-BD had significantly larger ICV (d = +0.16, q < .05 corrected), whereas FDRs-SZ showed smaller thalamic volumes than control subjects (d = -0.12, q < .05 corrected). ICV explained the enlargements in the brain measures in FDRs-BD. In FDRs-SZ, after correction for ICV, total brain, cortical gray matter, cerebral white matter, cerebellar gray and white matter, and thalamus volumes were significantly smaller; the cortex was thinner (d
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- 2019
14. Contribution of Rare Copy Number Variants to Bipolar Disorder Risk Is Limited to Schizoaffective Cases
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Charney, Alexander W, Stahl, Eli A, Green, Elaine K, Chen, Chia-Yen, Moran, Jennifer L, Chambert, Kimberly, Belliveau, Richard A, Forty, Liz, Gordon-Smith, Katherine, Lee, Phil H, Bromet, Evelyn J, Buckley, Peter F, Escamilla, Michael A, Fanous, Ayman H, Fochtmann, Laura J, Lehrer, Douglas S, Malaspina, Dolores, Marder, Stephen R, Morley, Christopher P, Nicolini, Humberto, Perkins, Diana O, Rakofsky, Jeffrey J, Rapaport, Mark H, Medeiros, Helena, Sobell, Janet L, Backlund, Lena, Bergen, Sarah E, Juréus, Anders, Schalling, Martin, Lichtenstein, Paul, Knowles, James A, Burdick, Katherine E, Jones, Ian, Jones, Lisa A, Hultman, Christina M, Perlis, Roy, Purcell, Shaun M, McCarroll, Steven A, Pato, Carlos N, Pato, Michele T, Di Florio, Ariana, Craddock, Nick, Landén, Mikael, Smoller, Jordan W, Ruderfer, Douglas M, and Sklar, Pamela
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Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Genetics ,Serious Mental Illness ,Bipolar Disorder ,Mental Health ,Prevention ,Brain Disorders ,Schizophrenia ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Case-Control Studies ,Cohort Studies ,DNA Copy Number Variations ,Gene Duplication ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Humans ,Multifactorial Inheritance ,Psychotic Disorders ,Bipolar disorder ,Copy number variant ,Polygenic risk score ,Rare variant burden ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Psychiatry ,Biological sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Psychology - Abstract
BackgroundGenetic risk for bipolar disorder (BD) is conferred through many common alleles, while a role for rare copy number variants (CNVs) is less clear. Subtypes of BD including schizoaffective disorder bipolar type (SAB), bipolar I disorder (BD I), and bipolar II disorder (BD II) differ according to the prominence and timing of psychosis, mania, and depression. The genetic factors contributing to the combination of symptoms among these subtypes are poorly understood.MethodsRare large CNVs were analyzed in 6353 BD cases (3833 BD I [2676 with psychosis, 850 without psychosis, and 307 with unknown psychosis history], 1436 BD II, 579 SAB, and 505 BD not otherwise specified) and 8656 controls. CNV burden and a polygenic risk score (PRS) for schizophrenia were used to evaluate the relative contributions of rare and common variants to risk of BD, BD subtypes, and psychosis.ResultsCNV burden did not differ between BD and controls when treated as a single diagnostic entity. However, burden in SAB was increased relative to controls (p = .001), BD I (p = .0003), and BD II (p = .0007). Burden and schizophrenia PRSs were increased in SAB compared with BD I with psychosis (CNV p = .0007, PRS p = .004), and BD I without psychosis (CNV p = .0004, PRS p = 3.9 × 10-5). Within BD I, psychosis was associated with increased schizophrenia PRSs (p = .005) but not CNV burden.ConclusionsCNV burden in BD is limited to SAB. Rare and common genetic variants may contribute differently to risk for psychosis and perhaps other classes of psychiatric symptoms.
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- 2019
15. Identification of common genetic risk variants for autism spectrum disorder
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Grove, Jakob, Ripke, Stephan, Als, Thomas D, Mattheisen, Manuel, Walters, Raymond K, Won, Hyejung, Pallesen, Jonatan, Agerbo, Esben, Andreassen, Ole A, Anney, Richard, Awashti, Swapnil, Belliveau, Rich, Bettella, Francesco, Buxbaum, Joseph D, Bybjerg-Grauholm, Jonas, Bækvad-Hansen, Marie, Cerrato, Felecia, Chambert, Kimberly, Christensen, Jane H, Churchhouse, Claire, Dellenvall, Karin, Demontis, Ditte, De Rubeis, Silvia, Devlin, Bernie, Djurovic, Srdjan, Dumont, Ashley L, Goldstein, Jacqueline I, Hansen, Christine S, Hauberg, Mads Engel, Hollegaard, Mads V, Hope, Sigrun, Howrigan, Daniel P, Huang, Hailiang, Hultman, Christina M, Klei, Lambertus, Maller, Julian, Martin, Joanna, Martin, Alicia R, Moran, Jennifer L, Nyegaard, Mette, Nærland, Terje, Palmer, Duncan S, Palotie, Aarno, Pedersen, Carsten Bøcker, Pedersen, Marianne Giørtz, dPoterba, Timothy, Poulsen, Jesper Buchhave, Pourcain, Beate St, Qvist, Per, Rehnström, Karola, Reichenberg, Abraham, Reichert, Jennifer, Robinson, Elise B, Roeder, Kathryn, Roussos, Panos, Saemundsen, Evald, Sandin, Sven, Satterstrom, F Kyle, Davey Smith, George, Stefansson, Hreinn, Steinberg, Stacy, Stevens, Christine R, Sullivan, Patrick F, Turley, Patrick, Walters, G Bragi, Xu, Xinyi, Stefansson, Kari, Geschwind, Daniel H, Nordentoft, Merete, Hougaard, David M, Werge, Thomas, Mors, Ole, Mortensen, Preben Bo, Neale, Benjamin M, Daly, Mark J, and Børglum, Anders D
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Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (IDD) ,Human Genome ,Pediatric ,Brain Disorders ,Autism ,Biotechnology ,Genetics ,Mental Health ,Prevention ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Mental health ,Adolescent ,Autism Spectrum Disorder ,Case-Control Studies ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Denmark ,Female ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Humans ,Male ,Multifactorial Inheritance ,Phenotype ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,Risk Factors ,Autism Spectrum Disorder Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium ,BUPGEN ,Major Depressive Disorder Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium ,23andMe Research Team ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a highly heritable and heterogeneous group of neurodevelopmental phenotypes diagnosed in more than 1% of children. Common genetic variants contribute substantially to ASD susceptibility, but to date no individual variants have been robustly associated with ASD. With a marked sample-size increase from a unique Danish population resource, we report a genome-wide association meta-analysis of 18,381 individuals with ASD and 27,969 controls that identified five genome-wide-significant loci. Leveraging GWAS results from three phenotypes with significantly overlapping genetic architectures (schizophrenia, major depression, and educational attainment), we identified seven additional loci shared with other traits at equally strict significance levels. Dissecting the polygenic architecture, we found both quantitative and qualitative polygenic heterogeneity across ASD subtypes. These results highlight biological insights, particularly relating to neuronal function and corticogenesis, and establish that GWAS performed at scale will be much more productive in the near term in ASD.
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- 2019
16. The impact of educational attainment, intelligence and intellectual disability on schizophrenia: a Swedish population-based register and genetic study
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Song, Jie, Yao, Shuyang, Kowalec, Kaarina, Lu, Yi, Sariaslan, Amir, Szatkiewicz, Jin P., Larsson, Henrik, Lichtenstein, Paul, Hultman, Christina M., and Sullivan, Patrick F.
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- 2022
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17. Mapping genomic loci implicates genes and synaptic biology in schizophrenia
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Trubetskoy, Vassily, Pardiñas, Antonio F., Qi, Ting, Panagiotaropoulou, Georgia, Awasthi, Swapnil, Bigdeli, Tim B., Bryois, Julien, Chen, Chia-Yen, Dennison, Charlotte A., Hall, Lynsey S., Lam, Max, Watanabe, Kyoko, Frei, Oleksandr, Ge, Tian, Harwood, Janet C., Koopmans, Frank, Magnusson, Sigurdur, Richards, Alexander L., Sidorenko, Julia, Wu, Yang, Zeng, Jian, Grove, Jakob, Kim, Minsoo, Li, Zhiqiang, Voloudakis, Georgios, Zhang, Wen, Adams, Mark, Agartz, Ingrid, Atkinson, Elizabeth G., Agerbo, Esben, Al Eissa, Mariam, Albus, Margot, Alexander, Madeline, Alizadeh, Behrooz Z., Alptekin, Köksal, Als, Thomas D., Amin, Farooq, Arolt, Volker, Arrojo, Manuel, Athanasiu, Lavinia, Azevedo, Maria Helena, Bacanu, Silviu A., Bass, Nicholas J., Begemann, Martin, Belliveau, Richard A., Bene, Judit, Benyamin, Beben, Bergen, Sarah E., Blasi, Giuseppe, Bobes, Julio, Bonassi, Stefano, Braun, Alice, Bressan, Rodrigo Affonseca, Bromet, Evelyn J., Bruggeman, Richard, Buckley, Peter F., Buckner, Randy L., Bybjerg-Grauholm, Jonas, Cahn, Wiepke, Cairns, Murray J., Calkins, Monica E., Carr, Vaughan J., Castle, David, Catts, Stanley V., Chambert, Kimberley D., Chan, Raymond C. K., Chaumette, Boris, Cheng, Wei, Cheung, Eric F. C., Chong, Siow Ann, Cohen, David, Consoli, Angèle, Cordeiro, Quirino, Costas, Javier, Curtis, Charles, Davidson, Michael, Davis, Kenneth L., de Haan, Lieuwe, Degenhardt, Franziska, DeLisi, Lynn E., Demontis, Ditte, Dickerson, Faith, Dikeos, Dimitris, Dinan, Timothy, Djurovic, Srdjan, Duan, Jubao, Ducci, Giuseppe, Dudbridge, Frank, Eriksson, Johan G., Fañanás, Lourdes, Faraone, Stephen V., Fiorentino, Alessia, Forstner, Andreas, Frank, Josef, Freimer, Nelson B., Fromer, Menachem, Frustaci, Alessandra, Gadelha, Ary, Genovese, Giulio, Gershon, Elliot S., Giannitelli, Marianna, Giegling, Ina, Giusti-Rodríguez, Paola, Godard, Stephanie, Goldstein, Jacqueline I., González Peñas, Javier, González-Pinto, Ana, Gopal, Srihari, Gratten, Jacob, Green, Michael F., Greenwood, Tiffany A., Guillin, Olivier, Gülöksüz, Sinan, Gur, Raquel E., Gur, Ruben C., Gutiérrez, Blanca, Hahn, Eric, Hakonarson, Hakon, Haroutunian, Vahram, Hartmann, Annette M., Harvey, Carol, Hayward, Caroline, Henskens, Frans A., Herms, Stefan, Hoffmann, Per, Howrigan, Daniel P., Ikeda, Masashi, Iyegbe, Conrad, Joa, Inge, Julià, Antonio, Kähler, Anna K., Kam-Thong, Tony, Kamatani, Yoichiro, Karachanak-Yankova, Sena, Kebir, Oussama, Keller, Matthew C., Kelly, Brian J., Khrunin, Andrey, Kim, Sung-Wan, Klovins, Janis, Kondratiev, Nikolay, Konte, Bettina, Kraft, Julia, Kubo, Michiaki, Kučinskas, Vaidutis, Kučinskiene, Zita Ausrele, Kusumawardhani, Agung, Kuzelova-Ptackova, Hana, Landi, Stefano, Lazzeroni, Laura C., Lee, Phil H., Legge, Sophie E., Lehrer, Douglas S., Lencer, Rebecca, Lerer, Bernard, Li, Miaoxin, Lieberman, Jeffrey, Light, Gregory A., Limborska, Svetlana, Liu, Chih-Min, Lönnqvist, Jouko, Loughland, Carmel M., Lubinski, Jan, Luykx, Jurjen J., Lynham, Amy, Macek, Jr, Milan, Mackinnon, Andrew, Magnusson, Patrik K. E., Maher, Brion S., Maier, Wolfgang, Malaspina, Dolores, Mallet, Jacques, Marder, Stephen R., Marsal, Sara, Martin, Alicia R., Martorell, Lourdes, Mattheisen, Manuel, McCarley, Robert W., McDonald, Colm, McGrath, John J., Medeiros, Helena, Meier, Sandra, Melegh, Bela, Melle, Ingrid, Mesholam-Gately, Raquelle I., Metspalu, Andres, Michie, Patricia T., Milani, Lili, Milanova, Vihra, Mitjans, Marina, Molden, Espen, Molina, Esther, Molto, María Dolores, Mondelli, Valeria, Moreno, Carmen, Morley, Christopher P., Muntané, Gerard, Murphy, Kieran C., Myin-Germeys, Inez, Nenadić, Igor, Nestadt, Gerald, Nikitina-Zake, Liene, Noto, Cristiano, Nuechterlein, Keith H., O’Brien, Niamh Louise, O’Neill, F. Anthony, Oh, Sang-Yun, Olincy, Ann, Ota, Vanessa Kiyomi, Pantelis, Christos, Papadimitriou, George N., Parellada, Mara, Paunio, Tiina, Pellegrino, Renata, Periyasamy, Sathish, Perkins, Diana O., Pfuhlmann, Bruno, Pietiläinen, Olli, Pimm, Jonathan, Porteous, David, Powell, John, Quattrone, Diego, Quested, Digby, Radant, Allen D., Rampino, Antonio, Rapaport, Mark H., Rautanen, Anna, Reichenberg, Abraham, Roe, Cheryl, Roffman, Joshua L., Roth, Julian, Rothermundt, Matthias, Rutten, Bart P. F., Saker-Delye, Safaa, Salomaa, Veikko, Sanjuan, Julio, Santoro, Marcos Leite, Savitz, Adam, Schall, Ulrich, Scott, Rodney J., Seidman, Larry J., Sharp, Sally Isabel, Shi, Jianxin, Siever, Larry J., Sigurdsson, Engilbert, Sim, Kang, Skarabis, Nora, Slominsky, Petr, So, Hon-Cheong, Sobell, Janet L., Söderman, Erik, Stain, Helen J., Steen, Nils Eiel, Steixner-Kumar, Agnes A., Stögmann, Elisabeth, Stone, William S., Straub, Richard E., Streit, Fabian, Strengman, Eric, Stroup, T. Scott, Subramaniam, Mythily, Sugar, Catherine A., Suvisaari, Jaana, Svrakic, Dragan M., Swerdlow, Neal R., Szatkiewicz, Jin P., Ta, Thi Minh Tam, Takahashi, Atsushi, Terao, Chikashi, Thibaut, Florence, Toncheva, Draga, Tooney, Paul A., Torretta, Silvia, Tosato, Sarah, Tura, Gian Battista, Turetsky, Bruce I., Üçok, Alp, Vaaler, Arne, van Amelsvoort, Therese, van Winkel, Ruud, Veijola, Juha, Waddington, John, Walter, Henrik, Waterreus, Anna, Webb, Bradley T., Weiser, Mark, Williams, Nigel M., Witt, Stephanie H., Wormley, Brandon K., Wu, Jing Qin, Xu, Zhida, Yolken, Robert, Zai, Clement C., Zhou, Wei, Zhu, Feng, Zimprich, Fritz, Atbaşoğlu, Eşref Cem, Ayub, Muhammad, Benner, Christian, Bertolino, Alessandro, Black, Donald W., Bray, Nicholas J., Breen, Gerome, Buccola, Nancy G., Byerley, William F., Chen, Wei J., Cloninger, C. Robert, Crespo-Facorro, Benedicto, Donohoe, Gary, Freedman, Robert, Galletly, Cherrie, Gandal, Michael J., Gennarelli, Massimo, Hougaard, David M., Hwu, Hai-Gwo, Jablensky, Assen V., McCarroll, Steven A., Moran, Jennifer L., Mors, Ole, Mortensen, Preben B., Müller-Myhsok, Bertram, Neil, Amanda L., Nordentoft, Merete, Pato, Michele T., Petryshen, Tracey L., Pirinen, Matti, Pulver, Ann E., Schulze, Thomas G., Silverman, Jeremy M., Smoller, Jordan W., Stahl, Eli A., Tsuang, Debby W., Vilella, Elisabet, Wang, Shi-Heng, Xu, Shuhua, Adolfsson, Rolf, Arango, Celso, Baune, Bernhard T., Belangero, Sintia Iole, Børglum, Anders D., Braff, David, Bramon, Elvira, Buxbaum, Joseph D., Campion, Dominique, Cervilla, Jorge A., Cichon, Sven, Collier, David A., Corvin, Aiden, Curtis, David, Forti, Marta Di, Domenici, Enrico, Ehrenreich, Hannelore, Escott-Price, Valentina, Esko, Tõnu, Fanous, Ayman H., Gareeva, Anna, Gawlik, Micha, Gejman, Pablo V., Gill, Michael, Glatt, Stephen J., Golimbet, Vera, Hong, Kyung Sue, Hultman, Christina M., Hyman, Steven E., Iwata, Nakao, Jönsson, Erik G., Kahn, René S., Kennedy, James L., Khusnutdinova, Elza, Kirov, George, Knowles, James A., Krebs, Marie-Odile, Laurent-Levinson, Claudine, Lee, Jimmy, Lencz, Todd, Levinson, Douglas F., Li, Qingqin S., Liu, Jianjun, Malhotra, Anil K., Malhotra, Dheeraj, McIntosh, Andrew, McQuillin, Andrew, Menezes, Paulo R., Morgan, Vera A., Morris, Derek W., Mowry, Bryan J., Murray, Robin M., Nimgaonkar, Vishwajit, Nöthen, Markus M., Ophoff, Roel A., Paciga, Sara A., Palotie, Aarno, Pato, Carlos N., Qin, Shengying, Rietschel, Marcella, Riley, Brien P., Rivera, Margarita, Rujescu, Dan, Saka, Meram C., Sanders, Alan R., Schwab, Sibylle G., Serretti, Alessandro, Sham, Pak C., Shi, Yongyong, St Clair, David, Stefánsson, Hreinn, Stefansson, Kari, Tsuang, Ming T., van Os, Jim, Vawter, Marquis P., Weinberger, Daniel R., Werge, Thomas, Wildenauer, Dieter B., Yu, Xin, Yue, Weihua, Holmans, Peter A., Pocklington, Andrew J., Roussos, Panos, Vassos, Evangelos, Verhage, Matthijs, Visscher, Peter M., Yang, Jian, Posthuma, Danielle, Andreassen, Ole A., Kendler, Kenneth S., Owen, Michael J., Wray, Naomi R., Daly, Mark J., Huang, Hailiang, Neale, Benjamin M., Sullivan, Patrick F., Ripke, Stephan, Walters, James T. R., and O’Donovan, Michael C.
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- 2022
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18. Systematic review and meta-analysis: relationships between attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and urinary symptoms in children
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Mahjani, Behrang, Koskela, Lotta Renström, Mahjani, Christina Gustavsson, Janecka, Magdalena, Batuure, Anita, Hultman, Christina M., Reichenberg, Abraham, Buxbaum, Joseph D., Akre, Olof, and Grice, Dorothy E.
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- 2022
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19. The 22q11.2 region regulates presynaptic gene-products linked to schizophrenia
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Nehme, Ralda, Pietiläinen, Olli, Artomov, Mykyta, Tegtmeyer, Matthew, Valakh, Vera, Lehtonen, Leevi, Bell, Christina, Singh, Tarjinder, Trehan, Aditi, Sherwood, John, Manning, Danielle, Peirent, Emily, Malik, Rhea, Guss, Ellen J., Hawes, Derek, Beccard, Amanda, Bara, Anne M., Hazelbaker, Dane Z., Zuccaro, Emanuela, Genovese, Giulio, Loboda, Alexander A., Neumann, Anna, Lilliehook, Christina, Kuismin, Outi, Hamalainen, Eija, Kurki, Mitja, Hultman, Christina M., Kähler, Anna K., Paulo, Joao A., Ganna, Andrea, Madison, Jon, Cohen, Bruce, McPhie, Donna, Adolfsson, Rolf, Perlis, Roy, Dolmetsch, Ricardo, Farhi, Samouil, McCarroll, Steven, Hyman, Steven, Neale, Ben, Barrett, Lindy E., Harper, Wade, Palotie, Aarno, Daly, Mark, and Eggan, Kevin
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- 2022
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20. Author Correction: Increased burden of ultra-rare structural variants localizing to boundaries of topologically associated domains in schizophrenia
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Halvorsen, Matthew, Huh, Ruth, Oskolkov, Nikolay, Wen, Jia, Netotea, Sergiu, Giusti-Rodriguez, Paola, Karlsson, Robert, Bryois, Julien, Nystedt, Björn, Ameur, Adam, Kähler, Anna K., Ancalade, NaEshia, Farrell, Martilias, Crowley, James J., Li, Yun, Magnusson, Patrik K. E., Gyllensten, Ulf, Hultman, Christina M., Sullivan, Patrick F., and Szatkiewicz, Jin P.
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- 2022
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21. Cell-type specific methylation changes in the newborn child associated to obstetric pain relief.
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Tran, Charles J., Campbell, Thomas L., Johnson, Ralen H., Xie, Lin Y., Hultman, Christina M., van den Oord, Edwin J. C. G., and Aberg, Karolina A.
- Subjects
ANESTHESIA in obstetrics ,GENE ontology ,ANALGESIA ,CELL differentiation ,ODDS ratio - Abstract
Although it is widely known that various pharmaceuticals affect the methylome, the knowledge of the effects from anesthesia is limited, and nearly nonexistent regarding the effects of obstetric anesthesia on the newborn child. Using sequencing based-methylation data and a reference-based statistical deconvolution approach we performed methylome-wide association studies (MWAS) of neonatal whole blood, and for each cell-type specifically, to detect methylation variations that are associated with the pain relief administered to the mother during delivery. Significant findings were replicated in a different dataset and followed-up with gene ontology analysis to pinpoint biological functions of potential relevance to these neonatal methylation alterations. The MWAS analyses detected methylome-wide significant (q<0.1) alterations in the newborn for laughing gas in granulocytes (two CpGs, p<5.50x10
-9 , q = 0.067), and for pudendal block in monocytes (five CpGs across three loci, p<1.51 x10-8 , q = 0.073). Suggestively significant findings (p<1.00x10-6 ) were detected for both treatments for bulk and all cell-types, and replication analyses showed consistent significant enrichment (odds ratios ranging 3.47–39.02; p<4.00×10−4 ) for each treatment, suggesting our results are robust. In contrast, we did not observe any overlap across treatments, suggesting that the treatments are associated with different alterations of the neonatal blood methylome. Gene ontology analyses of the replicating suggestively significant results indicated functions related to, for example, cell differentiation, intracellular membrane-bound organelles and calcium transport. In conclusion, for the first time, we investigated and detected effect of obstetric pain-relief on the blood methylome in the newborn child. The observed differences suggest that anesthetic treatment, such as laughing gas or pudendal block, may alter the neonatal methylome in a cell-type specific manner. Some of the observed alterations are part of gene ontology terms that previously have been suggested in relation to anesthetic treatment, supporting its potential role also in obstetric anesthesia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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22. Multivariate Pattern Analysis of Genotype-Phenotype Relationships in Schizophrenia.
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Zheutlin, Amanda, Chekroud, Adam, Polimanti, Renato, Gelernter, Joel, Sabb, Fred, Hultman, Christina, Cannon, Tyrone, Bilder, Robert, London, Edythe, and Freimer, Nelson
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Adult ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,Endophenotypes ,Female ,Genotype ,Humans ,Machine Learning ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Multifactorial Inheritance ,Phenotype ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,Registries ,Schizophrenia ,Sweden ,United States ,Young Adult - Abstract
Genetic risk variants for schizophrenia have been linked to many related clinical and biological phenotypes with the hopes of delineating how individual variation across thousands of variants corresponds to the clinical and etiologic heterogeneity within schizophrenia. This has primarily been done using risk score profiling, which aggregates effects across all variants into a single predictor. While effective, this method lacks flexibility in certain domains: risk scores cannot capture nonlinear effects and do not employ any variable selection. We used random forest, an algorithm with this flexibility designed to maximize predictive power, to predict 6 cognitive endophenotypes in a combined sample of psychiatric patients and controls (N = 739) using 77 genetic variants strongly associated with schizophrenia. Tenfold cross-validation was applied to the discovery sample and models were externally validated in an independent sample of similar ancestry (N = 336). Linear approaches, including linear regression and task-specific polygenic risk scores, were employed for comparison. Random forest models for processing speed (P = .019) and visual memory (P = .036) and risk scores developed for verbal (P = .042) and working memory (P = .037) successfully generalized to an independent sample with similar predictive strength and error. As such, we suggest that both methods may be useful for mapping a limited set of predetermined, disease-associated SNPs to related phenotypes. Incorporating random forest and other more flexible algorithms into genotype-phenotype mapping inquiries could contribute to parsing heterogeneity within schizophrenia; such algorithms can perform as well as standard methods and can capture a more comprehensive set of potential relationships.
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- 2018
23. Rates, distribution and implications of postzygotic mosaic mutations in autism spectrum disorder
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Lim, Elaine T, Uddin, Mohammed, De Rubeis, Silvia, Chan, Yingleong, Kamumbu, Anne S, Zhang, Xiaochang, D'Gama, Alissa M, Kim, Sonia N, Hill, Robert Sean, Goldberg, Arthur P, Poultney, Christopher, Minshew, Nancy J, Kushima, Itaru, Aleksic, Branko, Ozaki, Norio, Parellada, Mara, Arango, Celso, Penzol, Maria J, Carracedo, Angel, Kolevzon, Alexander, Hultman, Christina M, Weiss, Lauren A, Fromer, Menachem, Chiocchetti, Andreas G, Freitag, Christine M, Church, George M, Scherer, Stephen W, Buxbaum, Joseph D, and Walsh, Christopher A
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Biological Psychology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Neurosciences ,Psychology ,Brain Disorders ,Autism ,Genetics ,Pediatric ,Mental Health ,Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (IDD) ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Mental health ,Autism Spectrum Disorder ,Databases ,Genetic ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Genetic Variation ,Humans ,Mosaicism ,Mutation ,Missense ,Zygote ,Autism Sequencing Consortium ,Cognitive Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Biological psychology - Abstract
We systematically analyzed postzygotic mutations (PZMs) in whole-exome sequences from the largest collection of trios (5,947) with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) available, including 282 unpublished trios, and performed resequencing using multiple independent technologies. We identified 7.5% of de novo mutations as PZMs, 83.3% of which were not described in previous studies. Damaging, nonsynonymous PZMs within critical exons of prenatally expressed genes were more common in ASD probands than controls (P < 1 × 10-6), and genes carrying these PZMs were enriched for expression in the amygdala (P = 5.4 × 10-3). Two genes (KLF16 and MSANTD2) were significantly enriched for PZMs genome-wide, and other PZMs involved genes (SCN2A, HNRNPU and SMARCA4) whose mutation is known to cause ASD or other neurodevelopmental disorders. PZMs constitute a significant proportion of de novo mutations and contribute importantly to ASD risk.
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- 2017
24. Increased schizophrenia family history burden and reduced premorbid IQ in treatment-resistant schizophrenia: a Swedish National Register and Genomic Study
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Kowalec, Kaarina, Lu, Yi, Sariaslan, Amir, Song, Jie, Ploner, Alexander, Dalman, Christina, Hultman, Christina M., Larsson, Henrik, Lichtenstein, Paul, and Sullivan, Patrick F.
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- 2021
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25. Genome-wide association study of panic disorder reveals genetic overlap with neuroticism and depression
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Forstner, Andreas J., Awasthi, Swapnil, Wolf, Christiane, Maron, Eduard, Erhardt, Angelika, Czamara, Darina, Eriksson, Elias, Lavebratt, Catharina, Allgulander, Christer, Friedrich, Nina, Becker, Jessica, Hecker, Julian, Rambau, Stefanie, Conrad, Rupert, Geiser, Franziska, McMahon, Francis J., Moebus, Susanne, Hess, Timo, Buerfent, Benedikt C., Hoffmann, Per, Herms, Stefan, Heilmann-Heimbach, Stefanie, Kockum, Ingrid, Olsson, Tomas, Alfredsson, Lars, Weber, Heike, Alpers, Georg W., Arolt, Volker, Fehm, Lydia, Fydrich, Thomas, Gerlach, Alexander L., Hamm, Alfons, Kircher, Tilo, Pané-Farré, Christiane A., Pauli, Paul, Rief, Winfried, Ströhle, Andreas, Plag, Jens, Lang, Thomas, Wittchen, Hans-Ulrich, Mattheisen, Manuel, Meier, Sandra, Metspalu, Andres, Domschke, Katharina, Reif, Andreas, Hovatta, Iiris, Lindefors, Nils, Andersson, Evelyn, Schalling, Martin, Mbarek, Hamdi, Milaneschi, Yuri, de Geus, Eco J. C., Boomsma, Dorret I., Penninx, Brenda W. J. H., Thorgeirsson, Thorgeir E., Steinberg, Stacy, Stefansson, Kari, Stefansson, Hreinn, Müller-Myhsok, Bertram, Hansen, Thomas Folkmann, Børglum, Anders D., Werge, Thomas, Mortensen, Preben Bo, Nordentoft, Merete, Hougaard, David M., Hultman, Christina M., Sullivan, Patrick F., Nöthen, Markus M., Woldbye, David P. D., Mors, Ole, Binder, Elisabeth B., Rück, Christian, Ripke, Stephan, Deckert, Jürgen, and Schumacher, Johannes
- Published
- 2021
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26. Genome-wide association study of more than 40,000 bipolar disorder cases provides new insights into the underlying biology
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Mullins, Niamh, Forstner, Andreas J., O’Connell, Kevin S., Coombes, Brandon, Coleman, Jonathan R. I., Qiao, Zhen, Als, Thomas D., Bigdeli, Tim B., Børte, Sigrid, Bryois, Julien, Charney, Alexander W., Drange, Ole Kristian, Gandal, Michael J., Hagenaars, Saskia P., Ikeda, Masashi, Kamitaki, Nolan, Kim, Minsoo, Krebs, Kristi, Panagiotaropoulou, Georgia, Schilder, Brian M., Sloofman, Laura G., Steinberg, Stacy, Trubetskoy, Vassily, Winsvold, Bendik S., Won, Hong-Hee, Abramova, Liliya, Adorjan, Kristina, Agerbo, Esben, Al Eissa, Mariam, Albani, Diego, Alliey-Rodriguez, Ney, Anjorin, Adebayo, Antilla, Verneri, Antoniou, Anastasia, Awasthi, Swapnil, Baek, Ji Hyun, Bækvad-Hansen, Marie, Bass, Nicholas, Bauer, Michael, Beins, Eva C., Bergen, Sarah E., Birner, Armin, Bøcker Pedersen, Carsten, Bøen, Erlend, Boks, Marco P., Bosch, Rosa, Brum, Murielle, Brumpton, Ben M., Brunkhorst-Kanaan, Nathalie, Budde, Monika, Bybjerg-Grauholm, Jonas, Byerley, William, Cairns, Murray, Casas, Miquel, Cervantes, Pablo, Clarke, Toni-Kim, Cruceanu, Cristiana, Cuellar-Barboza, Alfredo, Cunningham, Julie, Curtis, David, Czerski, Piotr M., Dale, Anders M., Dalkner, Nina, David, Friederike S., Degenhardt, Franziska, Djurovic, Srdjan, Dobbyn, Amanda L., Douzenis, Athanassios, Elvsåshagen, Torbjørn, Escott-Price, Valentina, Ferrier, I. Nicol, Fiorentino, Alessia, Foroud, Tatiana M., Forty, Liz, Frank, Josef, Frei, Oleksandr, Freimer, Nelson B., Frisén, Louise, Gade, Katrin, Garnham, Julie, Gelernter, Joel, Giørtz Pedersen, Marianne, Gizer, Ian R., Gordon, Scott D., Gordon-Smith, Katherine, Greenwood, Tiffany A., Grove, Jakob, Guzman-Parra, José, Ha, Kyooseob, Haraldsson, Magnus, Hautzinger, Martin, Heilbronner, Urs, Hellgren, Dennis, Herms, Stefan, Hoffmann, Per, Holmans, Peter A., Huckins, Laura, Jamain, Stéphane, Johnson, Jessica S., Kalman, Janos L., Kamatani, Yoichiro, Kennedy, James L., Kittel-Schneider, Sarah, Knowles, James A., Kogevinas, Manolis, Koromina, Maria, Kranz, Thorsten M., Kranzler, Henry R., Kubo, Michiaki, Kupka, Ralph, Kushner, Steven A., Lavebratt, Catharina, Lawrence, Jacob, Leber, Markus, Lee, Heon-Jeong, Lee, Phil H., Levy, Shawn E., Lewis, Catrin, Liao, Calwing, Lucae, Susanne, Lundberg, Martin, MacIntyre, Donald J., Magnusson, Sigurdur H., Maier, Wolfgang, Maihofer, Adam, Malaspina, Dolores, Maratou, Eirini, Martinsson, Lina, Mattheisen, Manuel, McCarroll, Steven A., McGregor, Nathaniel W., McGuffin, Peter, McKay, James D., Medeiros, Helena, Medland, Sarah E., Millischer, Vincent, Montgomery, Grant W., Moran, Jennifer L., Morris, Derek W., Mühleisen, Thomas W., O’Brien, Niamh, O’Donovan, Claire, Olde Loohuis, Loes M., Oruc, Lilijana, Papiol, Sergi, Pardiñas, Antonio F., Perry, Amy, Pfennig, Andrea, Porichi, Evgenia, Potash, James B., Quested, Digby, Raj, Towfique, Rapaport, Mark H., DePaulo, J. Raymond, Regeer, Eline J., Rice, John P., Rivas, Fabio, Rivera, Margarita, Roth, Julian, Roussos, Panos, Ruderfer, Douglas M., Sánchez-Mora, Cristina, Schulte, Eva C., Senner, Fanny, Sharp, Sally, Shilling, Paul D., Sigurdsson, Engilbert, Sirignano, Lea, Slaney, Claire, Smeland, Olav B., Smith, Daniel J., Sobell, Janet L., Søholm Hansen, Christine, Soler Artigas, Maria, Spijker, Anne T., Stein, Dan J., Strauss, John S., Świątkowska, Beata, Terao, Chikashi, Thorgeirsson, Thorgeir E., Toma, Claudio, Tooney, Paul, Tsermpini, Evangelia-Eirini, Vawter, Marquis P., Vedder, Helmut, Walters, James T. R., Witt, Stephanie H., Xi, Simon, Xu, Wei, Yang, Jessica Mei Kay, Young, Allan H., Young, Hannah, Zandi, Peter P., Zhou, Hang, Zillich, Lea, Adolfsson, Rolf, Agartz, Ingrid, Alda, Martin, Alfredsson, Lars, Babadjanova, Gulja, Backlund, Lena, Baune, Bernhard T., Bellivier, Frank, Bengesser, Susanne, Berrettini, Wade H., Blackwood, Douglas H. R., Boehnke, Michael, Børglum, Anders D., Breen, Gerome, Carr, Vaughan J., Catts, Stanley, Corvin, Aiden, Craddock, Nicholas, Dannlowski, Udo, Dikeos, Dimitris, Esko, Tõnu, Etain, Bruno, Ferentinos, Panagiotis, Frye, Mark, Fullerton, Janice M., Gawlik, Micha, Gershon, Elliot S., Goes, Fernando S., Green, Melissa J., Grigoroiu-Serbanescu, Maria, Hauser, Joanna, Henskens, Frans, Hillert, Jan, Hong, Kyung Sue, Hougaard, David M., Hultman, Christina M., Hveem, Kristian, Iwata, Nakao, Jablensky, Assen V., Jones, Ian, Jones, Lisa A., Kahn, René S., Kelsoe, John R., Kirov, George, Landén, Mikael, Leboyer, Marion, Lewis, Cathryn M., Li, Qingqin S., Lissowska, Jolanta, Lochner, Christine, Loughland, Carmel, Martin, Nicholas G., Mathews, Carol A., Mayoral, Fermin, McElroy, Susan L., McIntosh, Andrew M., McMahon, Francis J., Melle, Ingrid, Michie, Patricia, Milani, Lili, Mitchell, Philip B., Morken, Gunnar, Mors, Ole, Mortensen, Preben Bo, Mowry, Bryan, Müller-Myhsok, Bertram, Myers, Richard M., Neale, Benjamin M., Nievergelt, Caroline M., Nordentoft, Merete, Nöthen, Markus M., O’Donovan, Michael C., Oedegaard, Ketil J., Olsson, Tomas, Owen, Michael J., Paciga, Sara A., Pantelis, Chris, Pato, Carlos, Pato, Michele T., Patrinos, George P., Perlis, Roy H., Posthuma, Danielle, Ramos-Quiroga, Josep Antoni, Reif, Andreas, Reininghaus, Eva Z., Ribasés, Marta, Rietschel, Marcella, Ripke, Stephan, Rouleau, Guy A., Saito, Takeo, Schall, Ulrich, Schalling, Martin, Schofield, Peter R., Schulze, Thomas G., Scott, Laura J., Scott, Rodney J., Serretti, Alessandro, Shannon Weickert, Cynthia, Smoller, Jordan W., Stefansson, Hreinn, Stefansson, Kari, Stordal, Eystein, Streit, Fabian, Sullivan, Patrick F., Turecki, Gustavo, Vaaler, Arne E., Vieta, Eduard, Vincent, John B., Waldman, Irwin D., Weickert, Thomas W., Werge, Thomas, Wray, Naomi R., Zwart, John-Anker, Biernacka, Joanna M., Nurnberger, John I., Cichon, Sven, Edenberg, Howard J., Stahl, Eli A., McQuillin, Andrew, Di Florio, Arianna, Ophoff, Roel A., and Andreassen, Ole A.
- Published
- 2021
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27. The Genetics of the Mood Disorder Spectrum: Genome-wide Association Analyses of More Than 185,000 Cases and 439,000 Controls
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Byrne, Enda M., Forstner, Andreas J., Holmans, Peter A., de Leeuw, Christiaan A., Mattheisen, Manuel, McQuillin, Andrew, Whitehead Pavlides, Jennifer M., Pers, Tune H., Ripke, Stephan, Stahl, Eli A., Steinberg, Stacy, Trubetskoy, Vassily, Trzaskowski, Maciej, Wang, Yunpeng, Abbott, Liam, Abdellaoui, Abdel, Adams, Mark J., Adolfsson, Annelie Nordin, Agerbo, Esben, Akil, Huda, Albani, Diego, Alliey-Rodriguez, Ney, Als, Thomas D., Andlauer, Till F.M., Anjorin, Adebayo, Antilla, Verneri, Van der Auwera, Sandra, Awasthi, Swapnil, Bacanu, Silviu-Alin, Badner, Judith A., Bækvad-Hansen, Marie, Barchas, Jack D., Bass, Nicholas, Bauer, Michael, Beekman, Aartjan T.F., Belliveau, Richard, Bergen, Sarah E., Bigdeli, Tim B., Binder, Elisabeth B., Bøen, Erlend, Boks, Marco, Boocock, James, Budde, Monika, Bunney, William, Burmeister, Margit, Buttenschøn, Henriette N., Bybjerg-Grauholm, Jonas, Byerley, William, Cai, Na, Casas, Miquel, Castelao, Enrique, Cerrato, Felecia, Cervantes, Pablo, Chambert, Kimberly, Charney, Alexander W., Chen, Danfeng, Christensen, Jane Hvarregaard, Churchhouse, Claire, St Clair, David, Clarke, Toni-Kim, Colodro-Conde, Lucía, Coryell, William, Couvy-Duchesne, Baptiste, Craig, David W., Crawford, Gregory E., Cruceanu, Cristiana, Czerski, Piotr M., Dale, Anders M., Davies, Gail, Deary, Ian J., Degenhardt, Franziska, Del-Favero, Jurgen, DePaulo, J Raymond, Derks, Eske M., Direk, Nese, Djurovic, Srdjan, Dobbyn, Amanda L., Dolan, Conor V., Dumont, Ashley, Dunn, Erin C., Eley, Thalia C., Elvsåshagen, Torbjørn, Escott-Price, Valentina, Fan, Chun Chieh, Finucane, Hilary K., Fischer, Sascha B., Flickinger, Matthew, Foo, Jerome C., Foroud, Tatiana M., Forty, Liz, Frank, Josef, Fraser, Christine, Freimer, Nelson B., Frisén, Louise, Gade, Katrin, Gage, Diane, Garnham, Julie, Giambartolomei, Claudia, Goes, Fernando S., Goldstein, Jaqueline, Gordon, Scott D., Gordon-Smith, Katherine, Green, Elaine K., Green, Melissa J., Greenwood, Tiffany A., Grove, Jakob, Guan, Weihua, Hall, Lynsey S., Hamshere, Marian L., Hansen, Christine Søholm, Hansen, Thomas F., Hautzinger, Martin, Heilbronner, Urs, van Hemert, Albert M., Herms, Stefan, Hickie, Ian B., Hipolito, Maria, Hoffmann, Per, Holland, Dominic, Homuth, Georg, Horn, Carsten, Hottenga, Jouke-Jan, Huckins, Laura, Ising, Marcus, Jamain, Stéphane, Jansen, Rick, Johnson, Jessica S., de Jong, Simone, Jorgenson, Eric, Juréus, Anders, Kandaswamy, Radhika, Karlsson, Robert, Kennedy, James L., Hassan Kiadeh, Farnush Farhadi, Kittel-Schneider, Sarah, Knowles, James A., Kogevinas, Manolis, Kohane, Isaac S., Koller, Anna C., Kraft, Julia, Kretzschmar, Warren W., Krogh, Jesper, Kupka, Ralph, Kutalik, Zoltán, Lavebratt, Catharina, Lawrence, Jacob, Lawson, William B., Leber, Markus, Lee, Phil H., Levy, Shawn E., Li, Jun Z., Li, Yihan, Lind, Penelope A., Liu, Chunyu, Olde Loohuis, Loes M., Maaser, Anna, MacIntyre, Donald J., MacKinnon, Dean F., Mahon, Pamela B., Maier, Wolfgang, Maier, Robert M., Marchini, Jonathan, Martinsson, Lina, Mbarek, Hamdi, McCarroll, Steve, McGrath, Patrick, McGuffin, Peter, McInnis, Melvin G., McKay, James D., Medeiros, Helena, Medland, Sarah E., Mehta, Divya, Meng, Fan, Middeldorp, Christel M., Mihailov, Evelin, Milaneschi, Yuri, Milani, Lili, Mirza, Saira Saeed, Mondimore, Francis M., Montgomery, Grant W., Morris, Derek W., Mostafavi, Sara, Mühleisen, Thomas W., Mullins, Niamh, Nauck, Matthias, Ng, Bernard, Nguyen, Hoang, Nievergelt, Caroline M., Nivard, Michel G., Nwulia, Evaristus A., Nyholt, Dale R., O'Donovan, Claire, O'Reilly, Paul F., Ori, Anil P.S., Oruc, Lilijana, Ösby, Urban, Oskarsson, Hogni, Painter, Jodie N., Parra, José Guzman, Pedersen, Carsten Bøcker, Pedersen, Marianne Giørtz, Perry, Amy, Peterson, Roseann E., Pettersson, Erik, Peyrot, Wouter J., Pfennig, Andrea, Pistis, Giorgio, Purcell, Shaun M., Quiroz, Jorge A., Qvist, Per, Regeer, Eline J., Reif, Andreas, Reinbold, Céline S., Rice, John P., Riley, Brien P., Rivas, Fabio, Rivera, Margarita, Roussos, Panos, Ruderfer, Douglas M., Ryu, Euijung, Sánchez-Mora, Cristina, Schatzberg, Alan F., Scheftner, William A., Schoevers, Robert, Schork, Nicholas J., Schulte, Eva C., Shehktman, Tatyana, Shen, Ling, Shi, Jianxin, Shilling, Paul D., Shyn, Stanley I., Sigurdsson, Engilbert, Slaney, Claire, Smeland, Olav B., Smit, Johannes H., Smith, Daniel J., Sobell, Janet L., Spijker, Anne T., Steffens, Michael, Strauss, John S., Streit, Fabian, Strohmaier, Jana, Szelinger, Szabolcs, Tansey, Katherine E., Teismann, Henning, Teumer, Alexander, Thompson, Robert C., Thompson, Wesley, Thomson, Pippa A., Thorgeirsson, Thorgeir E., Traylor, Matthew, Treutlein, Jens, Uitterlinden, André G., Umbricht, Daniel, Vedder, Helmut, Viktorin, Alexander, Visscher, Peter M., Wang, Weiqing, Watson, Stanley J., Webb, Bradley T., Weickert, Cynthia Shannon, Weickert, Thomas W., Weinsheimer, Shantel Marie, Wellmann, Jürgen, Willemsen, Gonneke, Witt, Stephanie H., Wu, Yang, Xi, Hualin S., Xu, Wei, Yang, Jian, Young, Allan H., Zandi, Peter, Zhang, Peng, Zhang, Futao, Zollner, Sebastian, Adolfsson, Rolf, Agartz, Ingrid, Alda, Martin, Arolt, Volker, Backlund, Lena, Baune, Bernhard T., Bellivier, Frank, Berger, Klaus, Berrettini, Wade H., Biernacka, Joanna M., Blackwood, Douglas H.R., Boehnke, Michael, Boomsma, Dorret I., Corvin, Aiden, Craddock, Nicholas, Daly, Mark J., Dannlowski, Udo, Domenici, Enrico, Domschke, Katharina, Esko, Tõnu, Etain, Bruno, Frye, Mark, Fullerton, Janice M., Gershon, Elliot S., de Geus, E.J.C., Gill, Michael, Goes, Fernando, Grabe, Hans J., Grigoroiu-Serbanescu, Maria, Hamilton, Steven P., Hauser, Joanna, Hayward, Caroline, Heath, Andrew C., Hougaard, David M., Hultman, Christina M., Jones, Ian, Jones, Lisa A., Kahn, René S., Kendler, Kenneth S., Kirov, George, Kloiber, Stefan, Landén, Mikael, Leboyer, Marion, Lewis, Glyn, Li, Qingqin S., Lissowska, Jolanta, Lucae, Susanne, Madden, Pamela A.F., Magnusson, Patrik K., Martin, Nicholas G., Mayoral, Fermin, McElroy, Susan L., McIntosh, Andrew M., McMahon, Francis J., Melle, Ingrid, Metspalu, Andres, Mitchell, Philip B., Morken, Gunnar, Mors, Ole, Mortensen, Preben Bo, Müller-Myhsok, Bertram, Myers, Richard M., Neale, Benjamin M., Nimgaonkar, Vishwajit, Nordentoft, Merete, Nöthen, Markus M., O'Donovan, Michael C., Oedegaard, Ketil J., Owen, Michael J., Paciga, Sara A., Pato, Carlos, Pato, Michele T., Pedersen, Nancy L., Penninx, Brenda W.J. H., Perlis, Roy H., Porteous, David J., Posthuma, Danielle, Potash, James B., Preisig, Martin, Ramos-Quiroga, Josep Antoni, Ribasés, Marta, Rietschel, Marcella, Rouleau, Guy A., Schaefer, Catherine, Schalling, Martin, Schofield, Peter R., Schulze, Thomas G., Serretti, Alessandro, Smoller, Jordan W., Stefansson, Hreinn, Stefansson, Kari, Stordal, Eystein, Tiemeier, Henning, Turecki, Gustavo, Uher, Rudolf, Vaaler, Arne E., Vieta, Eduard, Vincent, John B., Völzke, Henry, Weissman, Myrna M., Werge, Thomas, Andreassen, Ole A., Børglum, Anders D., Cichon, Sven, Edenberg, Howard J., Di Florio, Arianna, Kelsoe, John, Levinson, Douglas F., Lewis, Cathryn M., Nurnberger, John I., Ophoff, Roel A., Scott, Laura J., Sklar, Pamela, Sullivan, Patrick F., Wray, Naomi R., Coleman, Jonathan R.I., Gaspar, Héléna A., Bryois, Julien, and Breen, Gerome
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- 2020
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28. Maternal Effects as Causes of Risk for Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
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Mahjani, Behrang, Klei, Lambertus, Hultman, Christina M., Larsson, Henrik, Devlin, Bernie, Buxbaum, Joseph D., Sandin, Sven, and Grice, Dorothy E.
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- 2020
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29. Characterization of Single Gene Copy Number Variants in Schizophrenia
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Szatkiewicz, Jin P., Fromer, Menachem, Nonneman, Randal J., Ancalade, NaEshia, Johnson, Jessica S., Stahl, Eli A., Rees, Elliott, Bergen, Sarah E., Hultman, Christina M., Kirov, George, O’Donovan, Michael, Owen, Michael, Holmans, Peter, Sklar, Pamela, Sullivan, Patrick F., Purcell, Shaun M., Crowley, James J., and Ruderfer, Douglas M.
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- 2020
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30. Genome-wide association study of 40,000 individuals identifies two novel loci associated with bipolar disorder.
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Hou, Liping, Bergen, Sarah E, Akula, Nirmala, Song, Jie, Hultman, Christina M, Landén, Mikael, Adli, Mazda, Alda, Martin, Ardau, Raffaella, Arias, Bárbara, Aubry, Jean-Michel, Backlund, Lena, Badner, Judith A, Barrett, Thomas B, Bauer, Michael, Baune, Bernhard T, Bellivier, Frank, Benabarre, Antonio, Bengesser, Susanne, Berrettini, Wade H, Bhattacharjee, Abesh Kumar, Biernacka, Joanna M, Birner, Armin, Bloss, Cinnamon S, Brichant-Petitjean, Clara, Bui, Elise T, Byerley, William, Cervantes, Pablo, Chillotti, Caterina, Cichon, Sven, Colom, Francesc, Coryell, William, Craig, David W, Cruceanu, Cristiana, Czerski, Piotr M, Davis, Tony, Dayer, Alexandre, Degenhardt, Franziska, Del Zompo, Maria, DePaulo, J Raymond, Edenberg, Howard J, Étain, Bruno, Falkai, Peter, Foroud, Tatiana, Forstner, Andreas J, Frisén, Louise, Frye, Mark A, Fullerton, Janice M, Gard, Sébastien, Garnham, Julie S, Gershon, Elliot S, Goes, Fernando S, Greenwood, Tiffany A, Grigoroiu-Serbanescu, Maria, Hauser, Joanna, Heilbronner, Urs, Heilmann-Heimbach, Stefanie, Herms, Stefan, Hipolito, Maria, Hitturlingappa, Shashi, Hoffmann, Per, Hofmann, Andrea, Jamain, Stephane, Jiménez, Esther, Kahn, Jean-Pierre, Kassem, Layla, Kelsoe, John R, Kittel-Schneider, Sarah, Kliwicki, Sebastian, Koller, Daniel L, König, Barbara, Lackner, Nina, Laje, Gonzalo, Lang, Maren, Lavebratt, Catharina, Lawson, William B, Leboyer, Marion, Leckband, Susan G, Liu, Chunyu, Maaser, Anna, Mahon, Pamela B, Maier, Wolfgang, Maj, Mario, Manchia, Mirko, Martinsson, Lina, McCarthy, Michael J, McElroy, Susan L, McInnis, Melvin G, McKinney, Rebecca, Mitchell, Philip B, Mitjans, Marina, Mondimore, Francis M, Monteleone, Palmiero, Mühleisen, Thomas W, Nievergelt, Caroline M, Nöthen, Markus M, Novák, Tomas, Nurnberger, John I, Nwulia, Evaristus A, and Ösby, Urban
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Genetics ,Mental Health ,Clinical Research ,Human Genome ,Bipolar Disorder ,Prevention ,Brain Disorders ,Serious Mental Illness ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Chromosomes ,Human ,X ,Female ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Humans ,Male ,Receptor ,ErbB-2 ,Receptor ,erbB-2 ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Genetics & Heredity - Abstract
Bipolar disorder (BD) is a genetically complex mental illness characterized by severe oscillations of mood and behaviour. Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified several risk loci that together account for a small portion of the heritability. To identify additional risk loci, we performed a two-stage meta-analysis of >9 million genetic variants in 9,784 bipolar disorder patients and 30,471 controls, the largest GWAS of BD to date. In this study, to increase power we used ∼2,000 lithium-treated cases with a long-term diagnosis of BD from the Consortium on Lithium Genetics, excess controls, and analytic methods optimized for markers on the X-chromosome. In addition to four known loci, results revealed genome-wide significant associations at two novel loci: an intergenic region on 9p21.3 (rs12553324, P = 5.87 × 10 - 9; odds ratio (OR) = 1.12) and markers within ERBB2 (rs2517959, P = 4.53 × 10 - 9; OR = 1.13). No significant X-chromosome associations were detected and X-linked markers explained very little BD heritability. The results add to a growing list of common autosomal variants involved in BD and illustrate the power of comparing well-characterized cases to an excess of controls in GWAS.
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- 2016
31. Analysis of protein-coding genetic variation in 60,706 humans.
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Lek, Monkol, Karczewski, Konrad J, Minikel, Eric V, Samocha, Kaitlin E, Banks, Eric, Fennell, Timothy, O'Donnell-Luria, Anne H, Ware, James S, Hill, Andrew J, Cummings, Beryl B, Tukiainen, Taru, Birnbaum, Daniel P, Kosmicki, Jack A, Duncan, Laramie E, Estrada, Karol, Zhao, Fengmei, Zou, James, Pierce-Hoffman, Emma, Berghout, Joanne, Cooper, David N, Deflaux, Nicole, DePristo, Mark, Do, Ron, Flannick, Jason, Fromer, Menachem, Gauthier, Laura, Goldstein, Jackie, Gupta, Namrata, Howrigan, Daniel, Kiezun, Adam, Kurki, Mitja I, Moonshine, Ami Levy, Natarajan, Pradeep, Orozco, Lorena, Peloso, Gina M, Poplin, Ryan, Rivas, Manuel A, Ruano-Rubio, Valentin, Rose, Samuel A, Ruderfer, Douglas M, Shakir, Khalid, Stenson, Peter D, Stevens, Christine, Thomas, Brett P, Tiao, Grace, Tusie-Luna, Maria T, Weisburd, Ben, Won, Hong-Hee, Yu, Dongmei, Altshuler, David M, Ardissino, Diego, Boehnke, Michael, Danesh, John, Donnelly, Stacey, Elosua, Roberto, Florez, Jose C, Gabriel, Stacey B, Getz, Gad, Glatt, Stephen J, Hultman, Christina M, Kathiresan, Sekar, Laakso, Markku, McCarroll, Steven, McCarthy, Mark I, McGovern, Dermot, McPherson, Ruth, Neale, Benjamin M, Palotie, Aarno, Purcell, Shaun M, Saleheen, Danish, Scharf, Jeremiah M, Sklar, Pamela, Sullivan, Patrick F, Tuomilehto, Jaakko, Tsuang, Ming T, Watkins, Hugh C, Wilson, James G, Daly, Mark J, MacArthur, Daniel G, and Exome Aggregation Consortium
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Exome Aggregation Consortium ,Humans ,Rare Diseases ,Proteome ,Sample Size ,DNA Mutational Analysis ,Phenotype ,Genetic Variation ,Exome ,Datasets as Topic ,Clinical Research ,Biotechnology ,Human Genome ,Genetics ,Genetic Testing ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Generic health relevance ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Large-scale reference data sets of human genetic variation are critical for the medical and functional interpretation of DNA sequence changes. Here we describe the aggregation and analysis of high-quality exome (protein-coding region) DNA sequence data for 60,706 individuals of diverse ancestries generated as part of the Exome Aggregation Consortium (ExAC). This catalogue of human genetic diversity contains an average of one variant every eight bases of the exome, and provides direct evidence for the presence of widespread mutational recurrence. We have used this catalogue to calculate objective metrics of pathogenicity for sequence variants, and to identify genes subject to strong selection against various classes of mutation; identifying 3,230 genes with near-complete depletion of predicted protein-truncating variants, with 72% of these genes having no currently established human disease phenotype. Finally, we demonstrate that these data can be used for the efficient filtering of candidate disease-causing variants, and for the discovery of human 'knockout' variants in protein-coding genes.
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- 2016
32. Polygenic overlap between schizophrenia risk and antipsychotic response: a genomic medicine approach
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Ruderfer, Douglas M, Charney, Alexander W, Readhead, Ben, Kidd, Brian A, Kähler, Anna K, Kenny, Paul J, Keiser, Michael J, Moran, Jennifer L, Hultman, Christina M, Scott, Stuart A, Sullivan, Patrick F, Purcell, Shaun M, Dudley, Joel T, and Sklar, Pamela
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Biological Psychology ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Schizophrenia ,Mental Health ,Genetics ,Prevention ,Biotechnology ,Serious Mental Illness ,Clinical Research ,Brain Disorders ,Human Genome ,5.1 Pharmaceuticals ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Aetiology ,Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Antipsychotic Agents ,Case-Control Studies ,Clozapine ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Genomics ,Humans ,Multifactorial Inheritance ,Registries ,Sweden ,Treatment Outcome ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Clinical sciences ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
BackgroundTherapeutic treatments for schizophrenia do not alleviate symptoms for all patients and efficacy is limited by common, often severe, side-effects. Genetic studies of disease can identify novel drug targets, and drugs for which the mechanism has direct genetic support have increased likelihood of clinical success. Large-scale genetic studies of schizophrenia have increased the number of genes and gene sets associated with risk. We aimed to examine the overlap between schizophrenia risk loci and gene targets of a comprehensive set of medications to potentially inform and improve treatment of schizophrenia.MethodsWe defined schizophrenia risk loci as genomic regions reaching genome-wide significance in the latest Psychiatric Genomics Consortium schizophrenia genome-wide association study (GWAS) of 36 989 cases and 113 075 controls and loss of function variants observed only once among 5079 individuals in an exome-sequencing study of 2536 schizophrenia cases and 2543 controls (Swedish Schizophrenia Study). Using two large and orthogonally created databases, we collated drug targets into 167 gene sets targeted by pharmacologically similar drugs and examined enrichment of schizophrenia risk loci in these sets. We further linked the exome-sequenced data with a national drug registry (the Swedish Prescribed Drug Register) to assess the contribution of rare variants to treatment response, using clozapine prescription as a proxy for treatment resistance.FindingsWe combined results from testing rare and common variation and, after correction for multiple testing, two gene sets were associated with schizophrenia risk: agents against amoebiasis and other protozoal diseases (106 genes, p=0·00046, pcorrected =0·024) and antipsychotics (347 genes, p=0·00078, pcorrected=0·046). Further analysis pointed to antipsychotics as having independent enrichment after removing genes that overlapped these two target sets. We noted significant enrichment both in known targets of antipsychotics (70 genes, p=0·0078) and novel predicted targets (277 genes, p=0·019). Patients with treatment-resistant schizophrenia had an excess of rare disruptive variants in gene targets of antipsychotics (347 genes, p=0·0067) and in genes with evidence for a role in antipsychotic efficacy (91 genes, p=0·0029).InterpretationOur results support genetic overlap between schizophrenia pathogenesis and antipsychotic mechanism of action. This finding is consistent with treatment efficacy being polygenic and suggests that single-target therapeutics might be insufficient. We provide evidence of a role for rare functional variants in antipsychotic treatment response, pointing to a subset of patients where their genetic information could inform treatment. Finally, we present a novel framework for identifying treatments from genetic data and improving our understanding of therapeutic mechanism.FundingUS National Institutes of Health.
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- 2016
33. Rare loss-of-function variants in SETD1A are associated with schizophrenia and developmental disorders
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Singh, Tarjinder, Kurki, Mitja I, Curtis, David, Purcell, Shaun M, Crooks, Lucy, McRae, Jeremy, Suvisaari, Jaana, Chheda, Himanshu, Blackwood, Douglas, Breen, Gerome, Pietiläinen, Olli, Gerety, Sebastian S, Ayub, Muhammad, Blyth, Moira, Cole, Trevor, Collier, David, Coomber, Eve L, Craddock, Nick, Daly, Mark J, Danesh, John, DiForti, Marta, Foster, Alison, Freimer, Nelson B, Geschwind, Daniel, Johnstone, Mandy, Joss, Shelagh, Kirov, Georg, Körkkö, Jarmo, Kuismin, Outi, Holmans, Peter, Hultman, Christina M, Iyegbe, Conrad, Lönnqvist, Jouko, Männikkö, Minna, McCarroll, Steve A, McGuffin, Peter, McIntosh, Andrew M, McQuillin, Andrew, Moilanen, Jukka S, Moore, Carmel, Murray, Robin M, Newbury-Ecob, Ruth, Ouwehand, Willem, Paunio, Tiina, Prigmore, Elena, Rees, Elliott, Roberts, David, Sambrook, Jennifer, Sklar, Pamela, Clair, David St, Veijola, Juha, Walters, James TR, Williams, Hywel, Sullivan, Patrick F, Hurles, Matthew E, O'Donovan, Michael C, Palotie, Aarno, Owen, Michael J, and Barrett, Jeffrey C
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Biological Psychology ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Genetics ,Serious Mental Illness ,Human Genome ,Schizophrenia ,Biotechnology ,Brain Disorders ,Mental Health ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Mental health ,Case-Control Studies ,Cohort Studies ,Female ,Finland ,Genetic Association Studies ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Genetic Variation ,Histone-Lysine N-Methyltransferase ,Humans ,Male ,Neurodevelopmental Disorders ,Swedish Schizophrenia Study ,INTERVAL Study ,DDD Study ,UK10 K Consortium ,Neurosciences ,Cognitive Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Biological psychology - Abstract
By analyzing the whole-exome sequences of 4,264 schizophrenia cases, 9,343 controls and 1,077 trios, we identified a genome-wide significant association between rare loss-of-function (LoF) variants in SETD1A and risk for schizophrenia (P = 3.3 × 10(-9)). We found only two heterozygous LoF variants in 45,376 exomes from individuals without a neuropsychiatric diagnosis, indicating that SETD1A is substantially depleted of LoF variants in the general population. Seven of the ten individuals with schizophrenia carrying SETD1A LoF variants also had learning difficulties. We further identified four SETD1A LoF carriers among 4,281 children with severe developmental disorders and two more carriers in an independent sample of 5,720 Finnish exomes, both with notable neuropsychiatric phenotypes. Together, our observations indicate that LoF variants in SETD1A cause a range of neurodevelopmental disorders, including schizophrenia. Combining these data with previous common variant evidence, we suggest that epigenetic dysregulation, specifically in the histone H3K4 methylation pathway, is an important mechanism in the pathogenesis of schizophrenia.
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- 2016
34. Impact of a cis-associated gene expression SNP on chromosome 20q11.22 on bipolar disorder susceptibility, hippocampal structure and cognitive performance
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Li, Ming, Luo, Xiong-jian, Landén, Mikael, Bergen, Sarah E, Hultman, Christina M, Li, Xiao, Zhang, Wen, Yao, Yong-Gang, Zhang, Chen, Liu, Jiewei, Mattheisen, Manuel, Cichon, Sven, Mühleisen, Thomas W, Degenhardt, Franziska A, Nöthen, Markus M, Schulze, Thomas G, Grigoroiu-Serbanescu, Maria, Li, Hao, Fuller, Chris K, Chen, Chunhui, Dong, Qi, Chen, Chuansheng, Jamain, Stéphane, Leboyer, Marion, Bellivier, Frank, Etain, Bruno, Kahn, Jean-Pierre, Henry, Chantal, Preisig, Martin, Kutalik, Zoltán, Castelao, Enrique, Wright, Adam, Mitchell, Philip B, Fullerton, Janice M, Schofield, Peter R, Montgomery, Grant W, Medland, Sarah E, Gordon, Scott D, Martin, Nicholas G, Rietschel, Marcella, Liu, Chunyu, Kleinman, Joel E, Hyde, Thomas M, Weinberger, Daniel R, and Su, Bing
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Biological Psychology ,Epidemiology ,Health Sciences ,Psychology ,Serious Mental Illness ,Neurosciences ,Mental Health ,Brain Disorders ,Human Genome ,Genetics ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Mental health ,Aged ,Bayes Theorem ,Bipolar Disorder ,Case-Control Studies ,Chromosomes ,Human ,Pair 22 ,Cognition ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Hippocampus ,Humans ,Logistic Models ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,MooDS Consortium ,Swedish Bipolar Study Group ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Psychiatry ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
BACKGROUND:Bipolar disorder is a highly heritable polygenic disorder. Recent enrichment analyses suggest that there may be true risk variants for bipolar disorder in the expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL) in the brain. AIMS:We sought to assess the impact of eQTL variants on bipolar disorder risk by combining data from both bipolar disorder genome-wide association studies (GWAS) and brain eQTL. METHOD:To detect single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that influence expression levels of genes associated with bipolar disorder, we jointly analysed data from a bipolar disorder GWAS (7481 cases and 9250 controls) and a genome-wide brain (cortical) eQTL (193 healthy controls) using a Bayesian statistical method, with independent follow-up replications. The identified risk SNP was then further tested for association with hippocampal volume (n = 5775) and cognitive performance (n = 342) among healthy individuals. RESULTS:Integrative analysis revealed a significant association between a brain eQTL rs6088662 on chromosome 20q11.22 and bipolar disorder (log Bayes factor = 5.48; bipolar disorder P = 5.85 × 10(-5)). Follow-up studies across multiple independent samples confirmed the association of the risk SNP (rs6088662) with gene expression and bipolar disorder susceptibility (P = 3.54 × 10(-8)). Further exploratory analysis revealed that rs6088662 is also associated with hippocampal volume and cognitive performance in healthy individuals. CONCLUSIONS:Our findings suggest that 20q11.22 is likely a risk region for bipolar disorder; they also highlight the informative value of integrating functional annotation of genetic variants for gene expression in advancing our understanding of the biological basis underlying complex disorders, such as bipolar disorder.
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- 2016
35. Evacuation of Swedish survivors after the 2004 Southeast Asian tsunami : The survivors’ perspective and symptoms of post-traumatic stress
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GUDMUNDSDOTTIR, RAGNHILDUR, HULTMAN, CHRISTINA M., and VALDIMARSDOTTIR, UNNUR
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- 2019
36. Mediterranean diet and depression: a population-based cohort study
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Yin, Weiyao, Löf, Marie, Chen, Ruoqing, Hultman, Christina M., Fang, Fang, and Sandin, Sven
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- 2021
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37. How rare and common risk variation jointly affect liability for autism spectrum disorder
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Klei, Lambertus, McClain, Lora Lee, Mahjani, Behrang, Panayidou, Klea, De Rubeis, Silvia, Grahnat, Anna-Carin Säll, Karlsson, Gun, Lu, Yangyi, Melhem, Nadine, Xu, Xinyi, Reichenberg, Abraham, Sandin, Sven, Hultman, Christina M., Buxbaum, Joseph D., Roeder, Kathryn, and Devlin, Bernie
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- 2021
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38. Prevalence and phenotypic impact of rare potentially damaging variants in autism spectrum disorder
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Mahjani, Behrang, De Rubeis, Silvia, Gustavsson Mahjani, Christina, Mulhern, Maureen, Xu, Xinyi, Klei, Lambertus, Satterstrom, F. Kyle, Fu, Jack, Talkowski, Michael E., Reichenberg, Abraham, Sandin, Sven, Hultman, Christina M., Grice, Dorothy E., Roeder, Kathryn, Devlin, Bernie, and Buxbaum, Joseph D.
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- 2021
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39. Rates of clinically confirmed stress-related psychiatric disorders among Swedish tsunami survivors: 9-year follow-up
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Thordardottir, Edda Bjork, Song, Huan, Arnberg, Filip K., Hauksdottir, Arna, Fang, Fang, Butwicka, Agnieszka, Lichtenstein, Paul, Hultman, Christina M., and Valdimarsdottir, Unnur
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- 2021
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40. Cohort profile: Epidemiology and Genetics of Obsessive–compulsive disorder and chronic tic disorders in Sweden (EGOS)
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Mahjani, Behrang, Dellenvall, Karin, Grahnat, Anna-Carin Säll, Karlsson, Gun, Tuuliainen, Aki, Reichert, Jennifer, Mahjani, Christina G., Klei, Lambertus, De Rubeis, Silvia, Reichenberg, Abraham, Devlin, Bernie, Hultman, Christina M., Buxbaum, Joseph D., Sandin, Sven, and Grice, Dorothy E.
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- 2020
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41. Twin study shows association between monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 and kynurenic acid in cerebrospinal fluid
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Johansson, Viktoria, Erhardt, Sophie, Engberg, Göran, Kegel, Magdalena, Bhat, Maria, Schwieler, Lilly, Blennow, Kaj, Zetterberg, Henrik, Cannon, Tyrone D., Wetterberg, Lennart, Hultman, Christina M., and Landén, Mikael
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- 2020
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42. The effect of LRRK2 loss-of-function variants in humans
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Whiffin, Nicola, Armean, Irina M., Kleinman, Aaron, Marshall, Jamie L., Minikel, Eric V., Goodrich, Julia K., Quaife, Nicholas M., Cole, Joanne B., Wang, Qingbo, Karczewski, Konrad J., Cummings, Beryl B., Francioli, Laurent, Laricchia, Kristen, Guan, Anna, Alipanahi, Babak, Morrison, Peter, Baptista, Marco A. S., Merchant, Kalpana M., Ware, James S., Havulinna, Aki S., Iliadou, Bozenna, Lee, Jung-Jin, Nadkarni, Girish N., Whiteman, Cole, Daly, Mark, Esko, Tõnu, Hultman, Christina, Loos, Ruth J. F., Milani, Lili, Palotie, Aarno, Pato, Carlos, Pato, Michele, Saleheen, Danish, Sullivan, Patrick F., Alföldi, Jessica, Cannon, Paul, and MacArthur, Daniel G.
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- 2020
- Full Text
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43. New data and an old puzzle: the negative association between schizophrenia and rheumatoid arthritis
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Lee, S Hong, Byrne, Enda M, Hultman, Christina M, Kähler, Anna, Vinkhuyzen, Anna AE, Ripke, Stephan, Andreassen, Ole A, Frisell, Thomas, Gusev, Alexander, Hu, Xinli, Karlsson, Robert, Mantzioris, Vasilis X, McGrath, John J, Mehta, Divya, Stahl, Eli A, Zhao, Qiongyi, Kendler, Kenneth S, Sullivan, Patrick F, Price, Alkes L, O’Donovan, Michael, Okada, Yukinori, Mowry, Bryan J, Raychaudhuri, Soumya, Wray, Naomi R, Byerley, William, Cahn, Wiepke, Cantor, Rita M, Cichon, Sven, Cormican, Paul, Curtis, David, Djurovic, Srdjan, Escott-Price, Valentina, Gejman, Pablo V, Georgieva, Lyudmila, Giegling, Ina, Hansen, Thomas F, Ingason, Andrés, Kim, Yunjung, Konte, Bettina, Lee, Phil H, McIntosh, Andrew, McQuillin, Andrew, Morris, Derek W, Nöthen, Markus M, O’Dushlaine, Colm, Olincy, Ann, Olsen, Line, Pato, Carlos N, Pato, Michele T, Pickard, Benjamin S, Posthuma, Danielle, Rasmussen, Henrik B, Rietschel, Marcella, Rujescu, Dan, Schulze, Thomas G, Silverman, Jeremy M, Thirumalai, Srinivasa, Werge, Thomas, Agartz, Ingrid, Amin, Farooq, Azevedo, Maria H, Bass, Nicholas, Black, Donald W, Blackwood, Douglas HR, Bruggeman, Richard, Buccola, Nancy G, Choudhury, Khalid, Cloninger, Robert C, Corvin, Aiden, Craddock, Nicholas, Daly, Mark J, Datta, Susmita, Donohoe, Gary J, Duan, Jubao, Dudbridge, Frank, Fanous, Ayman, Freedman, Robert, Freimer, Nelson B, Friedl, Marion, Gill, Michael, Gurling, Hugh, De Haan, Lieuwe, Hamshere, Marian L, Hartmann, Annette M, Holmans, Peter A, Kahn, René S, Keller, Matthew C, Kenny, Elaine, Kirov, George K, Krabbendam, Lydia, Krasucki, Robert, Lawrence, Jacob, Lencz, Todd, Levinson, Douglas F, Lieberman, Jeffrey A, Lin, Dan-Yu, Linszen, Don H, Magnusson, Patrik KE, Maier, Wolfgang, and Malhotra, Anil K
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Epidemiology ,Health Sciences ,Human Genome ,Mental Health ,Brain Disorders ,Autoimmune Disease ,Schizophrenia ,Clinical Research ,Arthritis ,Serious Mental Illness ,Genetics ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Inflammatory and immune system ,Mental health ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Arthritis ,Rheumatoid ,Cohort Studies ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Female ,Gene-Environment Interaction ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Genetic Variation ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,Young Adult ,Schizophrenia Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium and Rheumatoid Arthritis Consortium International ,Schizophrenia Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium Authors ,Schizophrenia Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium Collaborators ,Rheumatoid Arthritis Consortium International Authors ,Rheumatoid Arthritis Consortium International Collaborators ,Statistics ,Public Health and Health Services ,Public health - Abstract
BackgroundA long-standing epidemiological puzzle is the reduced rate of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) in those with schizophrenia (SZ) and vice versa. Traditional epidemiological approaches to determine if this negative association is underpinned by genetic factors would test for reduced rates of one disorder in relatives of the other, but sufficiently powered data sets are difficult to achieve. The genomics era presents an alternative paradigm for investigating the genetic relationship between two uncommon disorders.MethodsWe use genome-wide common single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) data from independently collected SZ and RA case-control cohorts to estimate the SNP correlation between the disorders. We test a genotype X environment (GxE) hypothesis for SZ with environment defined as winter- vs summer-born.ResultsWe estimate a small but significant negative SNP-genetic correlation between SZ and RA (-0.046, s.e. 0.026, P = 0.036). The negative correlation was stronger for the SNP set attributed to coding or regulatory regions (-0.174, s.e. 0.071, P = 0.0075). Our analyses led us to hypothesize a gene-environment interaction for SZ in the form of immune challenge. We used month of birth as a proxy for environmental immune challenge and estimated the genetic correlation between winter-born and non-winter born SZ to be significantly less than 1 for coding/regulatory region SNPs (0.56, s.e. 0.14, P = 0.00090).ConclusionsOur results are consistent with epidemiological observations of a negative relationship between SZ and RA reflecting, at least in part, genetic factors. Results of the month of birth analysis are consistent with pleiotropic effects of genetic variants dependent on environmental context.
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- 2015
44. Joint analysis of psychiatric disorders increases accuracy of risk prediction for schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and major depressive disorder.
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Maier, Robert, Moser, Gerhard, Chen, Guo-Bo, Ripke, Stephan, Cross-Disorder Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium, Coryell, William, Potash, James B, Scheftner, William A, Shi, Jianxin, Weissman, Myrna M, Hultman, Christina M, Landén, Mikael, Levinson, Douglas F, Kendler, Kenneth S, Smoller, Jordan W, Wray, Naomi R, and Lee, S Hong
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Cross-Disorder Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium ,Humans ,Multivariate Analysis ,Linear Models ,Risk Assessment ,Mental Disorders ,Bipolar Disorder ,Depressive Disorder ,Major ,Schizophrenia ,Genetics ,Medical ,Multifactorial Inheritance ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,Genetic Testing ,Serious Mental Illness ,Brain Disorders ,Human Genome ,Prevention ,Mental Health ,Depression ,Genetics ,2.5 Research design and methodologies (aetiology) ,Aetiology ,Mental health ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Genetics & Heredity - Abstract
Genetic risk prediction has several potential applications in medical research and clinical practice and could be used, for example, to stratify a heterogeneous population of patients by their predicted genetic risk. However, for polygenic traits, such as psychiatric disorders, the accuracy of risk prediction is low. Here we use a multivariate linear mixed model and apply multi-trait genomic best linear unbiased prediction for genetic risk prediction. This method exploits correlations between disorders and simultaneously evaluates individual risk for each disorder. We show that the multivariate approach significantly increases the prediction accuracy for schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and major depressive disorder in the discovery as well as in independent validation datasets. By grouping SNPs based on genome annotation and fitting multiple random effects, we show that the prediction accuracy could be further improved. The gain in prediction accuracy of the multivariate approach is equivalent to an increase in sample size of 34% for schizophrenia, 68% for bipolar disorder, and 76% for major depressive disorders using single trait models. Because our approach can be readily applied to any number of GWAS datasets of correlated traits, it is a flexible and powerful tool to maximize prediction accuracy. With current sample size, risk predictors are not useful in a clinical setting but already are a valuable research tool, for example in experimental designs comparing cases with high and low polygenic risk.
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- 2015
45. Recurrence Risk of Autism in Siblings and Cousins: A Multinational, Population-Based Study
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Hansen, Stefan N., Schendel, Diana E., Francis, Richard W., Windham, Gayle C., Bresnahan, Michaeline, Levine, Stephen Z., Reichenberg, Abraham, Gissler, Mika, Kodesh, Arad, Bai, Dan, Yip, Benjamin Hon Kei, Leonard, Helen, Sandin, Sven, Buxbaum, Joseph D., Hultman, Christina, Sourander, Andre, Glasson, Emma J., Wong, Kingsley, Öberg, Rikard, and Parner, Erik T.
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- 2019
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46. A population-based heritability estimate of bipolar disorder – In a Swedish twin sample
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Johansson, Viktoria, Kuja-Halkola, Ralf, Cannon, Tyrone D., Hultman, Christina M., and Hedman, Anna M.
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- 2019
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47. Rates of Clinically Confirmed Stress-related Psychiatric Disorders Among Swedish Tsunami Survivors: 9-year Follow-up
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Thordardottir, Edda Bjork, Song, Huan, Arnberg, Filip K., Hauksdottir, Arna, Fang, Fang, Butwicka, Agnieszka, Lichtenstein, Paul, Hultman, Christina M., and Valdimarsdottir, Unnur
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- 2022
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48. The schizophrenia and bipolar twin study in Sweden (STAR)
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Johansson, Viktoria, Hultman, Christina M., Kizling, Isabelle, Martinsson, Lennart, Borg, Jacqueline, Hedman, Anna, and Cannon, Tyrone D.
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- 2019
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49. The association between family history and genomic burden with schizophrenia mortality: a Swedish population-based register and genetic sample study
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Kowalec, Kaarina, Lu, Yi, Song, Jie, Dalman, Christina, Hultman, Christina M., Larsson, Henrik, Lichtenstein, Paul, and Sullivan, Patrick F.
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- 2021
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50. Partitioning Heritability of Regulatory and Cell-Type-Specific Variants across 11 Common Diseases
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Gusev, Alexander, Lee, S Hong, Trynka, Gosia, Finucane, Hilary, Vilhjálmsson, Bjarni J, Xu, Han, Zang, Chongzhi, Ripke, Stephan, Bulik-Sullivan, Brendan, Stahl, Eli, Kähler, Anna K, Hultman, Christina M, Purcell, Shaun M, McCarroll, Steven A, Daly, Mark J, Pasaniuc, Bogdan, Sullivan, Patrick F, Neale, Benjamin M, Wray, Naomi R, Raychaudhuri, Soumya, Price, Alkes, Corvin, Aiden, Walters, James TR, Farh, Kai-How, Holmans, Peter A, Lee, Phil, Collier, David A, Huang, Hailiang, Pers, Tune H, Agartz, Ingrid, Agerbo, Esben, Albus, Margot, Alexander, Madeline, Amin, Farooq, Bacanu, Silviu A, Begemann, Martin, Belliveau, Richard A, Bene, Judit, Bergen, Sarah E, Bevilacqua, Elizabeth, Bigdeli, Tim B, Black, Donald W, Børglum, Anders D, Bruggeman, Richard, Buccola, Nancy G, Buckner, Randy L, Byerley, William, Cahn, Wiepke, Cai, Guiqing, Campion, Dominique, Cantor, Rita M, Carr, Vaughan J, Carrera, Noa, Catts, Stanley V, Chambert, Kimberly D, Chan, Raymond CK, Chen, Ronald YL, Chen, Eric YH, Cheng, Wei, Cheung, Eric FC, Chong, Siow Ann, Cloninger, C Robert, Cohen, David, Cohen, Nadine, Cormican, Paul, Craddock, Nick, Crowley, James J, Curtis, David, Davidson, Michael, Davis, Kenneth L, Degenhardt, Franziska, Del Favero, Jurgen, DeLisi, Lynn E, Demontis, Ditte, Dikeos, Dimitris, Dinan, Timothy, Djurovic, Srdjan, Donohoe, Gary, Drapeau, Elodie, Duan, Jubao, Dudbridge, Frank, Durmishi, Naser, Eichhammer, Peter, Eriksson, Johan, Escott-Price, Valentina, Essioux, Laurent, Fanous, Ayman H, Farrell, Martilias S, Frank, Josef, Franke, Lude, Freedman, Robert, Freimer, Nelson B, Friedl, Marion, Friedman, Joseph I, Fromer, Menachem, Genovese, Giulio, and Georgieva, Lyudmila
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Epidemiology ,Biological Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Genetics ,Human Genome ,Prevention ,Computer Simulation ,Genetic Diseases ,Inborn ,Genetic Variation ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Humans ,Inheritance Patterns ,Models ,Genetic ,Open Reading Frames ,Regulatory Elements ,Transcriptional ,Schizophrenia Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium ,SWE-SCZ Consortium ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Genetics & Heredity ,Biological sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
Regulatory and coding variants are known to be enriched with associations identified by genome-wide association studies (GWASs) of complex disease, but their contributions to trait heritability are currently unknown. We applied variance-component methods to imputed genotype data for 11 common diseases to partition the heritability explained by genotyped SNPs (hg(2)) across functional categories (while accounting for shared variance due to linkage disequilibrium). Extensive simulations showed that in contrast to current estimates from GWAS summary statistics, the variance-component approach partitions heritability accurately under a wide range of complex-disease architectures. Across the 11 diseases DNaseI hypersensitivity sites (DHSs) from 217 cell types spanned 16% of imputed SNPs (and 24% of genotyped SNPs) but explained an average of 79% (SE = 8%) of hg(2) from imputed SNPs (5.1× enrichment; p = 3.7 × 10(-17)) and 38% (SE = 4%) of hg(2) from genotyped SNPs (1.6× enrichment, p = 1.0 × 10(-4)). Further enrichment was observed at enhancer DHSs and cell-type-specific DHSs. In contrast, coding variants, which span 1% of the genome, explained
- Published
- 2014
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