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The schizophrenia genetics knowledgebase: a comprehensive update of findings from candidate gene studies.

Chenxing LiuTetsufumi KanazawaYe TianSuriati Mohamed SainiSerafino MancusoMd Shaki MostaidAtsushi TakahashiDai ZhangFuquan ZhangHao YuHyoung Doo ShinHyun Sub CheongMasashi IkedaMichiaki KuboNakao IwataSung-Il WooWeihua YueYoichiro KamataniYong-Yong ShiZhi-Qiang LiIan EverallChristos PantelisChad Bousman
Published in: Translational psychiatry (2019)
Over 3000 candidate gene association studies have been performed to elucidate the genetic underpinnings of schizophrenia. However, a comprehensive evaluation of these studies' findings has not been undertaken since the decommissioning of the schizophrenia gene (SzGene) database in 2011. As such, we systematically identified and carried out random-effects meta-analyses for all polymorphisms with four or more independent studies in schizophrenia along with a series of expanded meta-analyses incorporating published and unpublished genome-wide association (GWA) study data. Based on 550 meta-analyses, 11 SNPs in eight linkage disequilibrium (LD) independent loci showed Bonferroni-significant associations with schizophrenia. Expanded meta-analyses identified an additional 10 SNPs, for a total of 21 Bonferroni-significant SNPs in 14 LD-independent loci. Three of these loci (MTHFR, DAOA, ARVCF) had never been implicated by a schizophrenia GWA study. In sum, the present study has provided a comprehensive summary of the current schizophrenia genetics knowledgebase and has made available all the collected data as a resource for the research community.
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