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Polygenic dissection of diagnosis and clinical dimensions of bipolar disorder and schizophrenia

Authors :
Christina M. Hultman
Stéphane Jamain
Douglas M. Ruderfer
Pablo V. Gejman
Richard Amdur
Jordan W. Smoller
Michael Conlon O'Donovan
John I. Nurnberger
Peter Holmans
Kenneth S. Kendler
Pamela Sklar
Marion Leboyer
Patrick Sullivan
Ayman H. Fanous
Aiden Corvin
Mikael Landén
Andrew McQuillin
John R. Kelsoe
Nicholas John Craddock
Stephan Ripke
Srdjan Djurovic
Vishwajit L. Nimgaonkar
Ole A. Andreassen
Source :
Molecular psychiatry
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2013.

Abstract

Bipolar disorder and schizophrenia are two often severe disorders with high heritabilities. Recent studies have demonstrated a large overlap of genetic risk loci between these disorders but diagnostic and molecular distinctions still remain. Here, we perform a combined genome-wide association study (GWAS) of 19 779 bipolar disorder (BP) and schizophrenia (SCZ) cases versus 19 423 controls, in addition to a direct comparison GWAS of 7129 SCZ cases versus 9252 BP cases. In our case-control analysis, we identify five previously identified regions reaching genome-wide significance (CACNA1C, IFI44L, MHC, TRANK1 and MAD1L1) and a novel locus near PIK3C2A. We create a polygenic risk score that is significantly different between BP and SCZ and show a significant correlation between a BP polygenic risk score and the clinical dimension of mania in SCZ patients. Our results indicate that first, combining diseases with similar genetic risk profiles improves power to detect shared risk loci and second, that future direct comparisons of BP and SCZ are likely to identify loci with significant differential effects. Identifying these loci should aid in the fundamental understanding of how these diseases differ biologically. These findings also indicate that combining clinical symptom dimensions and polygenic signatures could provide additional information that may someday be used clinically.

Details

ISSN :
14765578 and 13594184
Volume :
19
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular Psychiatry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c61b87231a635f5c7d8574895f1378af
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/mp.2013.138