4.8 Article

Estimating the proportion of variation in susceptibility to schizophrenia captured by common SNPs

Journal

NATURE GENETICS
Volume 44, Issue 3, Pages 247-U35

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/ng.1108

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Australian National Health and Medical Research Council [389892, 442915, 496688, 613672, 613601]
  2. Australian Research Council [DP0770096, DP1093502, FT0991360]
  3. US National Institute of Mental Health [MH085812]
  4. Netherlands Scientific Organization (NWO) [480-05-003]

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Schizophrenia is a complex disorder caused by both genetic and environmental factors. Using 9,087 affected individuals, 12,171 controls and 915,354 imputed SNPs from the Schizophrenia Psychiatric Genome-Wide Association Study (GWAS) Consortium (PGC-SCZ), we estimate that 23% (s.e. = 1%) of variation in liability to schizophrenia is captured by SNPs. We show that a substantial proportion of this variation must be the result of common causal variants, that the variance explained by each chromosome is linearly related to its length (r = 0.89, P = 2.6 x 10(-8)), that the genetic basis of schizophrenia is the same in males and females, and that a disproportionate proportion of variation is attributable to a set of 2,725 genes expressed in the central nervous system (CNS; P = 7.6 x 10(-8)). These results are consistent with a polygenic genetic architecture and imply more individual SNP associations will be detected for this disease as sample size increases.

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