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Shared genetic architecture between schizophrenia and subcortical brain volumes implicates early neurodevelopmental processes and brain development in childhood

Authors :
Weiqiu Cheng
Dennis van der Meer
Nadine Parker
Guy Hindley
Kevin S. O’Connell
Yunpeng Wang
Alexey A. Shadrin
Dag Alnæs
Shahram Bahrami
Aihua Lin
Naz Karadag
Børge Holen
Sara Fernandez-Cabello
Chun-Chieh Fan
Anders M. Dale
Srdjan Djurovic
Lars T. Westlye
Oleksandr Frei
Olav B. Smeland
Ole A. Andreassen
RS: MHeNs - R2 - Mental Health
Psychiatry 2
Source :
Molecular Psychiatry, Molecular Psychiatry, 27(12), 5167-5176. Nature Publishing Group
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Patients with schizophrenia have consistently shown brain volumetric abnormalities, implicating both etiological and pathological processes. However, the genetic relationship between schizophrenia and brain volumetric abnormalities remains poorly understood. Here, we applied novel statistical genetic approaches (MiXeR and conjunctional false discovery rate analysis) to investigate genetic overlap with mixed effect directions using independent genome-wide association studies of schizophrenia (n = 130,644) and brain volumetric phenotypes, including subcortical brain and intracranial volumes (n = 33,735). We found brain volumetric phenotypes share substantial genetic variants (74–96%) with schizophrenia, and observed 107 distinct shared loci with sign consistency in independent samples. Genes mapped by shared loci revealed (1) significant enrichment in neurodevelopmental biological processes, (2) three co-expression clusters with peak expression at the prenatal stage, and (3) genetically imputed thalamic expression of CRHR1 and ARL17A was associated with the thalamic volume as early as in childhood. Together, our findings provide evidence of shared genetic architecture between schizophrenia and brain volumetric phenotypes and suggest that altered early neurodevelopmental processes and brain development in childhood may be involved in schizophrenia development. acceptedVersion

Details

ISSN :
14765578 and 13594184
Volume :
27
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular Psychiatry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ac8e3e1302f0f8c89787ced3ea7295df
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41380-022-01751-z