4.8 Article

Novel ultra-rare exonic variants identified in a founder population implicate cadherins in schizophrenia

Journal

NEURON
Volume 109, Issue 9, Pages 1465-1478

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2021.03.004

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Funding

  1. Human Frontier Science Program
  2. NIH research grants [AG042188, DK62429, DK062422, DK092235, NS050487, NS060113, AG021654, AG027734, MH089964, MH095458, MH084098, MH10857, MH114817, CA121852]
  3. NSF [08929882, 0845677]
  4. Lewis Rudin Foundation
  5. Northwell Health Foundation
  6. Brain AMP
  7. Behavior Foundation
  8. US-Israel Binational Science Foundation
  9. LUNGevity Foundation
  10. New York Crohn's Disease Foundation
  11. Parkinson's Disease Foundation
  12. Sharon Levine Corzine Cancer Research Fund
  13. Andrew Sabin Family Research Fund
  14. Direct For Computer & Info Scie & Enginr
  15. Div Of Information & Intelligent Systems [0845677] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Identification of rare variants associated with schizophrenia is challenging due to genetic heterogeneity, but in the Ashkenazi Jewish population, cases were found to have a higher frequency of novel MisLoF URVs compared to controls. The burden of MisLoF URVs was inversely correlated with polygenic risk scores in cases. The cadherin gene set was associated with schizophrenia, with a recurrent case mutation in PCDHA3 being linked to cytoplasmic aggregation formation.
The identification of rare variants associated with schizophrenia has proven challenging due to genetic heterogeneity, which is reduced in founder populations. In samples from the Ashkenazi Jewish population, we report that schizophrenia cases had a greater frequency of novel missense or loss of function (MisLoF) ultra-rare variants (URVs) compared to controls, and the MisLoF URV burden was inversely correlated with polygenic risk scores in cases. Characterizing 141 case-only genes (MisLoF URVs in >= 3 cases with none in controls), the cadherin gene set was associated with schizophrenia. We report a recurrent case mutation in PCDHA3 that results in the formation of cytoplasmic aggregates and failure to engage in homophilic interactions on the plasma membrane in cultured cells. Modeling purifying selection, we demonstrate that deleterious URVs are greatly overrepresented in the Ashkenazi population, yielding enhanced power for association studies. Identification of the cadherin/protocadherin family as risk genes helps specify the synaptic abnormalities central to schizophrenia.

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