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Background: Schizophrenia (SCZ) is a heterogeneous psychiatric disorder, with significant contribution from genetic factors particularly for chronic cases with negative symptoms and cognitive deficits. To date, Genome Wide Association Studies (GWAS) and exome sequencing have associated SCZ with a number of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and copy number variants (CNVs), but there is still missing heritability. Medium-sized structural variants (SVs) are difficult to detect using SNP arrays or second generation sequencing, and may account for part of the missing heritability of SCZ.
Aims And Objectives: To identify SVs associated with severe chronic SCZ across the whole genome.
Study Design: 10 multiplex families with probands suffering from chronic SCZ with negative symptoms and cognitive deficits were recruited, with all their affected members demonstrating uni-lineal inheritance. Control subjects comprised one affected member from the affected lineage, and unaffected members from each paternal and maternal lineage.
Methods: Third generation sequencing was applied to peripheral blood samples from 10 probands and 5 unaffected controls. Bioinformatic tools were used to identify SVs from the long sequencing reads, with confirmation of findings in probands by short-read Illumina sequencing, Sanger sequencing and visual manual validation with Integrated Genome Browser.
Results: In the 10 probands, we identified and validated 88 SVs (mostly in introns and medium-sized), within 79 genes, which were absent in the 5 unaffected control subjects. These 79 genes were enriched in 20 biological pathways which were related to brain development, neuronal migration, neurogenesis, neuronal/synaptic function, learning/memory, and hearing. These identified SVs also showed evidence for enrichment of genes that are highly expressed in the adolescent striatum.
Conclusion: A substantial part of the missing heritability in SCZ may be explained by medium-sized SVs detectable only by third generation sequencing. We have identified a number of such SVs potentially conferring risk for SCZ, which implicate multiple brain-related genes and pathways. In addition to previously-identified pathways involved in SCZ such as neurodevelopment and neuronal/synaptic functioning, we also found novel evidence for enrichment in hearing-related pathways and genes expressed in the adolescent striatum.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2022.1058359 | DOI Listing |
J Cardiovasc Dev Dis
July 2025
Department of Medical Chemistry, Biochemistry and Clinical Chemistry, Faculty of Medicine, University of Rijeka, 51000 Rijeka, Croatia.
Ischemic stroke is a complex, multifactorial disorder with a significant heritable component. Recent developments in genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have identified several common variants associated with clinical outcomes, stroke subtypes, and overall risk. Key loci implicated in biological pathways related to vascular integrity, lipid metabolism, inflammation, and atherogenesis include 9p21 (), , , and .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Biol Rep
August 2025
State Forestry and Grassland Administration Key Laboratory of Silviculture in downstream areas of the Yellow River, College of Forestry, ShandongAgricultural University, Taian, Shandong, China.
Am J Hum Genet
September 2025
University Brest, Inserm, EFS, UMR 1078, GGB, 29200 Brest, France. Electronic address:
The widely used American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG)/Association for Molecular Pathology (AMP) variant classification system is inherently limited by its binary categorization of variants as "pathogenic" or "benign," failing to account for the full spectrum of variant effects within the complex genetic architecture of human disease. Although various refinements have been proposed, a framework that adequately captures this continuum remains to be established. To address this limitation, we conducted an in-depth analysis of SPINK1 variants associated with chronic pancreatitis (CP), a disorder ranging from Mendelian to environmentally influenced forms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Genome
September 2025
Department of Plant Sciences, University of California, Davis, California, USA.
Strawberry (Fragaria ananassa) reproduces sexually through seeds and asexually through stolons. The ability to cost-effectively clonally propagate hybrid individuals on a large scale has shaped strawberry breeding and production practices. Despite the technical and economic importance of clonal propagation, little is known about the genetic regulation of runnering in strawberry, apart from the pleiotropic effects of PERPETUAL FLOWERING (PF), a dominant gene introgressed from a wild relative that abolishes temperature-dependent photoperiod sensitivity and incompletely and variably suppresses runnering.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Biol Evol
July 2025
Department of Biostatistics, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA.
Complex traits are determined by many loci-mostly regulatory elements-that, through combinatorial interactions, can affect multiple traits. Such high levels of epistasis and pleiotropy have been proposed in the omnigenic model and may explain why such a large part of complex trait heritability is usually missed by genome-wide association studies, while raising questions about the possibility for such traits to evolve in response to environmental constraints. To explore the molecular bases of complex traits and understand how they can adapt, we systematically analyzed the distribution of SNP heritability for 11 traits across 29 tissue-specific expression quantitative trait locus networks.
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