Genetic Study of Bipolar Disorder and Schizophrenia in African Americans
Author Information
Author(s): Li Runjia, Gagliano Taliun Sarah A., Liao Kevin, Flickinger Matthew, Sobell Janet L., Genovese Giulio, Locke Adam E., Chiu Rebeca Rothwell, LeFaive Jonathon, Wang Jiongming, Martins Taylor, Chapman Sinéad, Neumann Anna, Handsaker Robert E., Arnett Donna K., Barnes Kathleen C., Boerwinkle Eric, Braff David, Cade Brian E., Fornage Myriam, Gibbs Richard A., Hoth Karin F., Hou Lifang, Kooperberg Charles, Loos Ruth J.F., Metcalf Ginger A., Montgomery Courtney G., Morrison Alanna C., Qin Zhaohui S., Redline Susan, Reiner Alexander P., Rich Stephen S., Rotter Jerome I., Taylor Kent D., Viaud-Martinez Karine A., NHLBI Trans-Omics for Precision Medicine (TOPMed) Consortium, Genomic Psychiatry Cohort investigators, Bigdeli Tim B., Gabriel Stacey, Zollner Sebastian, Smith Albert V., Abecasis Goncalo, McCarroll Steve, Pato Michele T., Pato Carlos N., Boehnke Michael, Knowles James, Kang Hyun Min, Ophoff Roel A., Ernst Jason, Scott Laura J.
Primary Institution: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Hypothesis
The study investigates the association of genetic variants with bipolar disorder and schizophrenia in African American individuals.
Conclusion
The study found suggestive evidence linking certain genetic variants to bipolar disorder and highlights the importance of further research in African American populations.
Supporting Evidence
- The study included a large sample size of 17,463 controls to increase statistical power.
- Suggestive evidence of bipolar disorder association was found with single-variants on chromosome 18.
- Lower bipolar disorder risk was associated with rare and low-frequency variants on chromosome 11.
Takeaway
Researchers looked at the genes of African Americans to see if certain changes in their DNA are linked to bipolar disorder and schizophrenia.
Methodology
Whole genome sequencing was performed on African American individuals with bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, and unaffected controls, along with various genetic tests.
Limitations
The study primarily focuses on African American individuals, which may limit the generalizability of the findings.
Participant Demographics
1,598 individuals with bipolar disorder, 3,295 with schizophrenia, and 2,651 unaffected controls.
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
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