PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

Identification of shared risk loci and pathways for bipolar disorder and schizophrenia.

  • Andreas J Forstner,
  • Julian Hecker,
  • Andrea Hofmann,
  • Anna Maaser,
  • Céline S Reinbold,
  • Thomas W Mühleisen,
  • Markus Leber,
  • Jana Strohmaier,
  • Franziska Degenhardt,
  • Jens Treutlein,
  • Manuel Mattheisen,
  • Johannes Schumacher,
  • Fabian Streit,
  • Sandra Meier,
  • Stefan Herms,
  • Per Hoffmann,
  • André Lacour,
  • Stephanie H Witt,
  • Andreas Reif,
  • Bertram Müller-Myhsok,
  • Susanne Lucae,
  • Wolfgang Maier,
  • Markus Schwarz,
  • Helmut Vedder,
  • Jutta Kammerer-Ciernioch,
  • Andrea Pfennig,
  • Michael Bauer,
  • Martin Hautzinger,
  • Susanne Moebus,
  • Lorena M Schenk,
  • Sascha B Fischer,
  • Sugirthan Sivalingam,
  • Piotr M Czerski,
  • Joanna Hauser,
  • Jolanta Lissowska,
  • Neonila Szeszenia-Dabrowska,
  • Paul Brennan,
  • James D McKay,
  • Adam Wright,
  • Philip B Mitchell,
  • Janice M Fullerton,
  • Peter R Schofield,
  • Grant W Montgomery,
  • Sarah E Medland,
  • Scott D Gordon,
  • Nicholas G Martin,
  • Valery Krasnov,
  • Alexander Chuchalin,
  • Gulja Babadjanova,
  • Galina Pantelejeva,
  • Lilia I Abramova,
  • Alexander S Tiganov,
  • Alexey Polonikov,
  • Elza Khusnutdinova,
  • Martin Alda,
  • Cristiana Cruceanu,
  • Guy A Rouleau,
  • Gustavo Turecki,
  • Catherine Laprise,
  • Fabio Rivas,
  • Fermin Mayoral,
  • Manolis Kogevinas,
  • Maria Grigoroiu-Serbanescu,
  • Tim Becker,
  • Thomas G Schulze,
  • Marcella Rietschel,
  • Sven Cichon,
  • Heide Fier,
  • Markus M Nöthen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0171595
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 2
p. e0171595

Abstract

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Bipolar disorder (BD) is a highly heritable neuropsychiatric disease characterized by recurrent episodes of mania and depression. BD shows substantial clinical and genetic overlap with other psychiatric disorders, in particular schizophrenia (SCZ). The genes underlying this etiological overlap remain largely unknown. A recent SCZ genome wide association study (GWAS) by the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium identified 128 independent genome-wide significant single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). The present study investigated whether these SCZ-associated SNPs also contribute to BD development through the performance of association testing in a large BD GWAS dataset (9747 patients, 14278 controls). After re-imputation and correction for sample overlap, 22 of 107 investigated SCZ SNPs showed nominal association with BD. The number of shared SCZ-BD SNPs was significantly higher than expected (p = 1.46x10-8). This provides further evidence that SCZ-associated loci contribute to the development of BD. Two SNPs remained significant after Bonferroni correction. The most strongly associated SNP was located near TRANK1, which is a reported genome-wide significant risk gene for BD. Pathway analyses for all shared SCZ-BD SNPs revealed 25 nominally enriched gene-sets, which showed partial overlap in terms of the underlying genes. The enriched gene-sets included calcium- and glutamate signaling, neuropathic pain signaling in dorsal horn neurons, and calmodulin binding. The present data provide further insights into shared risk loci and disease-associated pathways for BD and SCZ. This may suggest new research directions for the treatment and prevention of these two major psychiatric disorders.