An international research consortium has discovered that many common genetic variants contribute to a person's risk of schizophrenia and explain at least a third of the risk of inheriting the disease.
This research provides the first molecular evidence that this form of genetic variation is involved in schizophrenia.The researchers also found that many of these DNA variations also are involved in bipolar disorder but not in several non-psychiatric diseases. The findings, reported by the International Schizophrenia Consortium and published online in the journal Nature, represent a new way of thinking about the genetics of psychiatric diseases, which seem to involve not only rare variants but also a significant number of common ones as well.
"While our study finds a surprising number of genetic effects, we fully expect that future work will assemble them into meaningful pathways that will teach us about the biology of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder," says Pamela Sklar, MD, PhD, of the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) Department of Psychiatry and Center for Human Genetic Research (CHGR), a senior associate member of the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard and corresponding author of the Nature paper.
Co-corresponding author Shaun Purcell, PhD, also of MGH Psychiatry and the CHGR, and an associate member of the Broad Institute, emphasizes that "how these genetic variants translate into schizophrenia or bipolar disorder for a given patient is not yet known." Sklar and Purcell stress that, although these results are remarkably robust and give insight into the underlying genetics of these diseases, they cannot currently be used as a diagnostic test or to predict an individual's personal risk.
Schizophrenia is a common and often devastating brain disorder characterized by persistent delusions and hallucinations. It affects about 1 percent of the world's population and usually strikes in late adolescence or early adulthood. Despite the availability of treatments, the course of the illness is usually chronic, and response to treatments is often incomplete, leading to prolonged disability and personal suffering. Family history, which reflects genetic inheritance, is a strong risk factor for both schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, and it has generally been assumed that dozens of genes, along with environmental factors, contribute to disease risk.
Formed in 2006, the International Schizophrenia Consortium is led by senior researchers from 11 institutes in Europe and the USA. Major funding and resources for the current work were provided by the Broad Institute's Stanley Center for Psychiatric Research. Equally crucial to the success of the project was the willingness of consortium groups to share thousands of patient DNA samples collected over many years.
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The most critical and surprising finding was that the same large group of genetic variants was more common in all groups of schizophrenia patients, even though the DNA samples were collected by different investigators and tested in different laboratories. The additional discovery that these schizophrenia-related variants were also common in people with bipolar disorder was particularly striking, since the two disorders are considered to be distinct, although related, conditions.
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Thomas Insel, MD, director of the National Institute for Mental Health, which partially funded the study, adds, "These new results recommend a fresh look at our diagnostic categories. If some of the same genetic risks underlie schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, perhaps these disorders originate from some common vulnerability in brain development."
Professor Ian Hickie, executive director of consortium member the Brain and Mind Research Institute, University of Sydney, Australia, says, "This is a key study from both a conceptual and a practical perspective. It provides striking evidence for the common genetic risk factors for the major psychiatric disorders. The race will now focus on identification of the key neurodevelopmental genes that underpin these disabling conditions."
Source-Eurekalert
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