- Gusev, Alexander;
- Mancuso, Nicholas;
- Won, Hyejung;
- Kousi, Maria;
- Finucane, Hilary K;
- Reshef, Yakir;
- Song, Lingyun;
- Safi, Alexias;
- McCarroll, Steven;
- Neale, Benjamin M;
- Ophoff, Roel A;
- O’Donovan, Michael C;
- Crawford, Gregory E;
- Geschwind, Daniel H;
- Katsanis, Nicholas;
- Sullivan, Patrick F;
- Pasaniuc, Bogdan;
- Price, Alkes L
Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified over 100 risk loci for schizophrenia, but the causal mechanisms remain largely unknown. We performed a transcriptome-wide association study (TWAS) integrating a schizophrenia GWAS of 79,845 individuals from the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium with expression data from brain, blood, and adipose tissues across 3,693 primarily control individuals. We identified 157 TWAS-significant genes, of which 35 did not overlap a known GWAS locus. Of these 157 genes, 42 were associated with specific chromatin features measured in independent samples, thus highlighting potential regulatory targets for follow-up. Suppression of one identified susceptibility gene, mapk3, in zebrafish showed a significant effect on neurodevelopmental phenotypes. Expression and splicing from the brain captured most of the TWAS effect across all genes. This large-scale connection of associations to target genes, tissues, and regulatory features is an essential step in moving toward a mechanistic understanding of GWAS.