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Genome-wide Association Analysis of Parkinson’s Disease and Schizophrenia Reveals Shared Genetic Architecture and Identifies Novel Risk Loci
- Smeland, Olav B;
- Shadrin, Alexey;
- Bahrami, Shahram;
- Broce, Iris;
- Tesli, Martin;
- Frei, Oleksandr;
- Wirgenes, Katrine V;
- O'Connell, Kevin S;
- Krull, Florian;
- Bettella, Francesco;
- Steen, Nils Eiel;
- Sugrue, Leo;
- Wang, Yunpeng;
- Svenningsson, Per;
- Sharma, Manu;
- Pihlstrøm, Lasse;
- Toft, Mathias;
- O'Donovan, Michael;
- Djurovic, Srdjan;
- Desikan, Rahul;
- Dale, Anders M;
- Andreassen, Ole A
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biopsych.2020.01.026Abstract
Background
Parkinson's disease (PD) and schizophrenia (SCZ) are heritable brain disorders that involve dysregulation of the dopaminergic system. Epidemiological studies have reported potential comorbidity between the disorders, and movement disturbances are common in patients with SCZ before treatment with antipsychotic drugs. Despite this, little is known about shared genetic etiology between the disorders.Methods
We analyzed recent large genome-wide association studies on patients with SCZ (N = 77,096) and PD (N = 417,508) using a conditional/conjunctional false discovery rate (FDR) approach to evaluate overlap in common genetic variants and improve statistical power for genetic discovery. Using a variety of biological resources, we functionally characterized the identified genomic loci.Results
We observed genetic enrichment in PD conditional on associations with SCZ and vice versa, indicating polygenic overlap. We then leveraged this cross-trait enrichment using conditional FDR analysis and identified 9 novel PD risk loci and 1 novel SCZ locus at conditional FDR < .01. Furthermore, we identified 9 genomic loci jointly associated with PD and SCZ at conjunctional FDR < .05. There was an even distribution of antagonistic and agonistic effect directions among the shared loci, in line with the insignificant genetic correlation between the disorders. Of 67 genes mapped to the shared loci, 65 are expressed in the human brain and show cell type-specific expression profiles.Conclusions
Altogether, the study increases understanding of the genetic architectures underlying SCZ and PD, indicating that common molecular genetic mechanisms may contribute to overlapping pathophysiological and clinical features between the disorders.Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
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