鶹Ƶ researcher part of international study uncovering new schizophrenia risk genes
Canadian and international scientists have uncovered six new schizophrenia risk genes in the largest study of its kind.
The results of the international Psychiatric Genomics Consortium CNV working group are published in the Nov. 21 advance online edition of . They further support the important role genes play in susceptibility to schizophrenia, and may be helpful in early diagnosis.
The team built a standardized pipeline to analyze the genes of individuals with schizophrenia as well as healthy controls using microarrays (technology which uses a microchip to determine if a genome has either missing or duplicated pieces of DNA). Researchers reported that individuals with schizophrenia tended to carry more genetic alterations than those in the control group, and these rare genomic copy variations or CNVs tended to affect genes in the synapse (the junction between two nerve cells).
“This study represents a milestone. Because of the systematic analysis in a large number of individuals with schizophrenia we were able to implicate several new genes, many of which are in the same biological pathways found in the brain,” says the first author of the paper Christian Marshall, assistant professor in 鶹Ƶ's department of laboratory medicine and pathology and associate director in genome diagnostics and The Centre for Applied Genomics at The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids). “Making the connection between these common pathways can lead to development of targeted therapies for schizophrenia and other psychiatric conditions.”
The study included over 40,000 people and more than 170 scientists and clinicians from across North America and Europe.
Schizophrenia is diagnosed in one in 100 people and is a chronic and severe psychiatric condition that affects how a person thinks, feels and behaves with onset in late teens or early adulthood. Previous studies of genomic copy number variation (CNV), which are duplications and deletions in the genes, have established an important role for rare genetic variants in the etiology of schizophrenia, but many studies are underpowered to robustly confirm these genetic associations.
Like many mental illnesses you can’t just take an x-ray or simple blood test to confirm a diagnosis, says Marshall, who is part of 鶹Ƶ's Faculty of Medicine. With this research, clinicians have genetic tools to help find more definitive answers as to whether a patient carries the risk genes for schizophrenia. The hope is this standardized pipeline will also accelerate discoveries for other conditions.
The team was co-led by 鶹Ƶ Professor Stephen Scherer, senior scientist and director of the Centre for Applied Genomics at SickKids and the McLaughlin Centre at the University of Toronto and Jonathan Sebat, director of Beyster Center for Psychiatric Genomics and professor in the department of psychiatry at the University of California San Diego's School of Medicine.
Read about Professor Scherer's research on autism
The Psychiatric Genomics Consortium began in early 2007, and it includes over 800 investigators from 38 countries. The PGC is the largest consortium and the largest biological experiment in the history of psychiatry. Core funding for the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium is from the US National Institute of Mental Health.
Caitlin Johannesson is a senior communications specialist with