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GWAS Study

Comparative genetic architectures of schizophrenia in East Asian and European populations.

Lam M, Chen CY, Li Z et al.

31740837 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
58140 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

LM
Lam M
CC
Chen CY
LZ
Li Z
MA
Martin AR
BJ
Bryois J
MX
Ma X
GH
Gaspar H
IM
Ikeda M
BB
Benyamin B
BB
Brown BC
LR
Liu R
ZW
Zhou W
GL
Guan L
KY
Kamatani Y
KS
Kim SW
KM
Kubo M
KA
Kusumawardhani AAAA
LC
Liu CM
MH
Ma H
PS
Periyasamy S
TA
Takahashi A
XZ
Xu Z
YH
Yu H
ZF
Zhu F
CW
Chen WJ
FS
Faraone S
GS
Glatt SJ
HL
He L
HS
Hyman SE
HH
Hwu HG
MS
McCarroll SA
NB
Neale BM
SP
Sklar P
WD
Wildenauer DB
YX
Yu X
ZD
Zhang D
MB
Mowry BJ
LJ
Lee J
HP
Holmans P
XS
Xu S
SP
Sullivan PF
RS
Ripke S
OM
O'Donovan MC
DM
Daly MJ
QS
Qin S
SP
Sham P
IN
Iwata N
HK
Hong KS
SS
Schwab SG
YW
Yue W
TM
Tsuang M
LJ
Liu J
MX
Ma X
KR
Kahn RS
SY
Shi Y
HH
Huang H
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Schizophrenia is a debilitating psychiatric disorder with approximately 1% lifetime risk globally. Large-scale schizophrenia genetic studies have reported primarily on European ancestry samples, potentially missing important biological insights. Here, we report the largest study to date of East Asian participants (22,778 schizophrenia cases and 35,362 controls), identifying 21 genome-wide-significant associations in 19 genetic loci. Common genetic variants that confer risk for schizophrenia have highly similar effects between East Asian and European ancestries (genetic correlation = 0.98 ± 0.03), indicating that the genetic basis of schizophrenia and its biology are broadly shared across populations. A fixed-effect meta-analysis including individuals from East Asian and European ancestries identified 208 significant associations in 176 genetic loci (53 novel). Trans-ancestry fine-mapping reduced the sets of candidate causal variants in 44 loci. Polygenic risk scores had reduced performance when transferred across ancestries, highlighting the importance of including sufficient samples of major ancestral groups to ensure their generalizability across populations.

22,778 East Asian ancestry cases, 35,362 East Asian ancestry controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

58140
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
East Asian, European
Ancestry
China, Hong Kong SAR, Japan, Republic of Korea, Indonesia, Singapore, Taiwan
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of health and genetic findings

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