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  Gene expression imputation across multiple brain regions reveals schizophrenia risk throughout development

Huckins, L. M., Dobbyn, A., Ruderfer, D. M., Hoffman, G., Wang, W., Pardinas, A., et al. (2017). Gene expression imputation across multiple brain regions reveals schizophrenia risk throughout development. bioRxiv. doi:10.1101/222596.

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Huckins, Laura M., Author
Dobbyn, Amanda, Author
Ruderfer, Douglas M., Author
Hoffman, Gabriel, Author
Wang, Weiqing, Author
Pardinas, Antonio, Author
Rajagopal, Veera M, Author
Als, Thomas D., Author
Nguyen, Hoang, Author
Girdhar, Kiran, Author
Boocock, James, Author
Roussos, Panos, Author
Fromer, Menachem, Author
Kramer, Robin, Author
Domencini, Enrico, Author
Gamazon, Eric, Author
Purcell, Shaun, Author
CommonMind Consortium, Author              
the Schizophrenia Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium, Author              
Ehrenreich, Hannelore1, Author           
iPSYCH-GEMS Schizophrenia Working Group, Author              Demontis, Ditte, AuthorBørglum, Anders D., AuthorWalters, James, AuthorO’Donovan, Michael, AuthorSullivan, Patrick, AuthorOwen, Michael, AuthorDevlin, Bernie, AuthorSieberts, Solveig K., AuthorCox, Nancy, AuthorIm, Hae Kyung, AuthorSklar, Pamela, AuthorStahl, Eli A., Author more..
Affiliations:
1Clinical neuroscience, Max Planck Institute of Experimental Medicine, Max Planck Society, Hermann-Rein-Str. 3, 37075 Göttingen, DE, ou_2173651              

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 Abstract: Transcriptomic imputation approaches offer an opportunity to test associations between disease and gene expression in otherwise inaccessible tissues, such as brain, by combining eQTL reference panels with large-scale genotype data. These genic associations could elucidate signals in complex GWAS loci and may disentangle the role of different tissues in disease development. Here, we use the largest eQTL reference panel for the dorso-lateral pre-frontal cortex (DLPFC), collected by the CommonMind Consortium, to create a set of gene expression predictors and demonstrate their utility. We applied these predictors to 40,299 schizophrenia cases and 65,264 matched controls, constituting the largest transcriptomic imputation study of schizophrenia to date. We also computed predicted gene expression levels for 12 additional brain regions, using publicly available predictor models from GTEx. We identified 413 genic associations across 13 brain regions. Stepwise conditioning across the genes and tissues identified 71 associated genes (67 outside the MHC), with the majority of associations found in the DLPFC, and of which 14/67 genes did not fall within previously genome-wide significant loci. We identified 36 significantly enriched pathways, including hexosaminidase-A deficiency, and multiple pathways associated with porphyric disorders. We investigated developmental expression patterns for all 67 non-MHC associated genes using BRAINSPAN, and identified groups of genes expressed specifically pre-natally or post-natally.

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Language(s): eng - English
 Dates: 2017-11-21
 Publication Status: Published online
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 Rev. Type: No review
 Identifiers: DOI: 10.1101/222596
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Title: bioRxiv
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