| Literature DB >> 30718465 |
Jin Szatkiewicz1, James J Crowley1, Annelie Nordin Adolfsson2, Karolina A Åberg3, Maaike Alaerts4, Giulio Genovese5, Steven McCarroll5, Jurgen Del-Favero6, Rolf Adolfsson7, Patrick F Sullivan8,9,10.
Abstract
We searched for genetic causes of major psychiatric disorders (bipolar disorder, schizoaffective disorder, and schizophrenia) in a large, densely affected pedigree from Northern Sweden that originated with three pairs of founders born around 1650. We applied a systematic genomic approach to the pedigree via karyotyping (N = 9), genome-wide SNP arrays (N = 418), whole-exome sequencing (N = 26), and whole-genome sequencing (N = 10). Comprehensive analysis did not identify plausible variants of strong effect. Rather, pedigree cases had significantly higher genetic risk scores compared to pedigree and community controls.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30718465 PMCID: PMC6362018 DOI: 10.1038/s41398-019-0414-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Psychiatry ISSN: 2158-3188 Impact factor: 6.222
Fig. 1a Pedigree diagram of a fraction of the Northern Sweden pedigree. This demonstrates that all subjects in the study (at bottom, filled = affected, open = unaffected) have a complex pattern of inheritance. All connect to three founder pairs. b Genetic risk scores (GRS) for schizophrenia in pedigree cases (N = 128, narrow definition of illness), pedigree controls (N = 201), and population controls with no lifetime serious mental illness from Northern Sweden (N = 1267). Pedigree cases had significantly greater schizophrenia GRS than pedigree controls and population controls. Pedigree controls and population controls were similar. c As in Fig. 1b but showing GRS for bipolar disorder. GRS for bipolar disorder were slightly greater in pedigree cases than pedigree controls. The training sets for schizophrenia and bipolar disorder were from the PGC after removing Swedish studies. Shown are violin plots with overlaid outlier-style bar plots
Technologies applied to the dense Swedish pedigree
| Method | Sample | Technology and genetic variation assessed |
|---|---|---|
| Karyotyping | Standard Giemsa banding; large, “microscopic” structural variants | |
| Pedigree linkage analysis | 472 short tandem repeat markers; regions shared IBD | |
| SNP genotyping | Illumina OmniExpress SNPs, CNVs | |
| Whole exome sequencing | Agilent SureSelect, Illumina HiSeq; exonic SNVs, indels | |
| Whole genome sequencing | Illumina X Ten; SNVs, indels, structural variants, trinucleotide repeats |
Clinical and demographic summary
| Diagnosis |
| Age at onset | Age at sampling | Percent male ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BIP1 | 81 | 26.4 (13.4) | 59.3 (14.5) | 40.7% (33) |
| BIP2 | 67 | 28.3 (16.3) | 52.0 (18.5) | 32.8% (22) |
| BIP-NOS | 22 | 28.2 (16.3) | 62.6 (18.7) | 27.3% (6) |
| SAD | 29 | 20.4 (7.4) | 50.7 (10.6) | 51.7% (15) |
| SCZ | 18 | 23.8 (7.3) | 59.5 (13.3) | 72.2% (13) |
| Pedigree controls | 201 | NA | 60.0 (15.5) | 42.3% (85) |
BIP1 bipolar disorder type I, BIP2 bipolar disorder II, BIP-NOS bipolar disorder not otherwise specified, SCZ schizophrenia, SAD schizoaffective disorder, IBD identical-by-descent, SNP single nucleotide polymorphism, SNV single nucleotide variant, CNV copy number variant, Indel insertion/deletion polymorphism, NA not applicable