| Literature DB >> 35410376 |
Duncan S Palmer1,2, Daniel P Howrigan3,4, Sinéad B Chapman4, Rolf Adolfsson5, Nick Bass6, Douglas Blackwood7, Marco P M Boks8, Chia-Yen Chen3,4,9, Claire Churchhouse3,4,10, Aiden P Corvin11, Nicholas Craddock12, David Curtis13,14, Arianna Di Florio15, Faith Dickerson16, Nelson B Freimer17,18, Fernando S Goes19, Xiaoming Jia20, Ian Jones12,21, Lisa Jones22, Lina Jonsson23,24, Rene S Kahn25, Mikael Landén23,26, Adam E Locke27, Andrew M McIntosh7, Andrew McQuillin6, Derek W Morris28, Michael C O'Donovan12, Roel A Ophoff17,18,29, Michael J Owen12, Nancy L Pedersen26, Danielle Posthuma30, Andreas Reif31, Neil Risch32,33, Catherine Schaefer33, Laura Scott34, Tarjinder Singh3,4, Jordan W Smoller35,36, Matthew Solomonson10, David St Clair37, Eli A Stahl38, Annabel Vreeker39, James T R Walters12, Weiqing Wang38, Nicholas A Watts3,10, Robert Yolken40, Peter P Zandi19, Benjamin M Neale41,42,43.
Abstract
We report results from the Bipolar Exome (BipEx) collaboration analysis of whole-exome sequencing of 13,933 patients with bipolar disorder (BD) matched with 14,422 controls. We find an excess of ultra-rare protein-truncating variants (PTVs) in patients with BD among genes under strong evolutionary constraint in both major BD subtypes. We find enrichment of ultra-rare PTVs within genes implicated from a recent schizophrenia exome meta-analysis (SCHEMA; 24,248 cases and 97,322 controls) and among binding targets of CHD8. Genes implicated from genome-wide association studies (GWASs) of BD, however, are not significantly enriched for ultra-rare PTVs. Combining gene-level results with SCHEMA, AKAP11 emerges as a definitive risk gene (odds ratio (OR) = 7.06, P = 2.83 × 10-9). At the protein level, AKAP-11 interacts with GSK3B, the hypothesized target of lithium, a primary treatment for BD. Our results lend support to BD's polygenicity, demonstrating a role for rare coding variation as a significant risk factor in BD etiology.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35410376 PMCID: PMC9117467 DOI: 10.1038/s41588-022-01034-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Genet ISSN: 1061-4036 Impact factor: 41.307