Gene Expression Elucidates Functional Impact of Polygenic Risk for Schizophrenia

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Author
Fromer, Menachem
Roussos, Panos
Sieberts, Solveig K
Johnson, Jessica S
Kavanagh, David H
Perumal, Thanneer M
Ruderfer, Douglas M
Oh, Edwin C
Topol, Aaron
Shah, Hardik R
Klei, Lambertus L
Kramer, Robin
Pinto, Dalila
Gümüş, Zeynep H
Cicek, A. Ercument
Dang, Kristen K
Browne, Andrew
Lu, Cong
Xie, Lu
Readhead, Ben
Stahl, Eli A
Parvizi, Mahsa
Hamamsy, Tymor
Fullard, John F
Wang, Ying-Chih
Mahajan, Milind C
Derry, Jonathan M J
Dudley, Joel
Hemby, Scott E
Logsdon, Benjamin A
Talbot, Konrad
Raj, Towfique
Bennett, David A
Zhu, Jun
Zhang, Bin
Sullivan, Patrick F
Chess, Andrew
Purcell, Shaun M
Shinobu, Leslie A
Mangravite, Lara M
Toyoshiba, Hiroyoshi
Gur, Raquel E
Hahn, Chang-Gyu
Lewis, David A
Haroutunian, Vahram
Peters, Mette A
Lipska, Barbara K
Buxbaum, Joseph D
Schadt, Eric E
Hirai, Keisuke
Roeder, Kathryn
Brennand, Kristen J
Katsanis, Nicholas
Domenici, Enrico
Devlin, Bernie
Sklar, Pamela
Note: Order does not necessarily reflect citation order of authors.
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https://doi.org/10.1038/nn.4399Metadata
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Fromer, M., P. Roussos, S. K. Sieberts, J. S. Johnson, D. H. Kavanagh, T. M. Perumal, D. M. Ruderfer, et al. 2016. “Gene Expression Elucidates Functional Impact of Polygenic Risk for Schizophrenia.” Nature neuroscience 19 (11): 1442-1453. doi:10.1038/nn.4399. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nn.4399.Abstract
Over 100 genetic loci harbor schizophrenia associated variants, yet how these variants confer liability is uncertain. The CommonMind Consortium sequenced RNA from dorsolateral prefrontal cortex of schizophrenia cases (N = 258) and control subjects (N = 279), creating a resource of gene expression and its genetic regulation. Using this resource, ~20% of schizophrenia loci have variants that could contribute to altered gene expression and liability. In five loci, only a single gene was involved: FURIN, TSNARE1, CNTN4, CLCN3, or SNAP91. Altering expression of FURIN, TSNARE1, or CNTN4 changes neurodevelopment in zebrafish; knockdown of FURIN in human neural progenitor cells yields abnormal migration. Of 693 genes showing significant case/control differential expression, their fold changes are ≤ 1.33, and an independent cohort yields similar results. Gene co-expression implicates a network relevant for schizophrenia. Our findings show schizophrenia is polygenic and highlight the utility of this resource for mechanistic interpretations of genetic liability for brain diseases.Other Sources
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5083142/pdf/Terms of Use
This article is made available under the terms and conditions applicable to Other Posted Material, as set forth at http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:dash.current.terms-of-use#LAACitable link to this page
http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:32071902
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