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GWAS Study

The genetic landscape of basal ganglia and implications for common brain disorders.

Bahrami S, Nordengen K, Rokicki J et al.

39353893 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
34794 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

BS
Bahrami S
NK
Nordengen K
RJ
Rokicki J
SA
Shadrin AA
RZ
Rahman Z
SO
Smeland OB
JP
Jaholkowski PP
PN
Parker N
PP
Parekh P
OK
O'Connell KS
ET
Elvsåshagen T
TM
Toft M
DS
Djurovic S
DA
Dale AM
WL
Westlye LT
KT
Kaufmann T
AO
Andreassen OA
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

The basal ganglia are subcortical brain structures involved in motor control, cognition, and emotion regulation. We conducted univariate and multivariate genome-wide association analyses (GWAS) to explore the genetic architecture of basal ganglia volumes using brain scans obtained from 34,794 Europeans with replication in 4,808 white and generalization in 5,220 non-white Europeans. Our multivariate GWAS identified 72 genetic loci associated with basal ganglia volumes with a replication rate of 55.6% at P < 0.05 and 87.5% showed the same direction, revealing a distributed genetic architecture across basal ganglia structures. Of these, 50 loci were novel, including exonic regions of APOE, NBR1 and HLAA. We examined the genetic overlap between basal ganglia volumes and several neurological and psychiatric disorders. The strongest genetic overlap was between basal ganglia and Parkinson's disease, as supported by robust LD-score regression-based genetic correlations. Mendelian randomization indicated genetic liability to larger striatal volume as potentially causal for Parkinson's disease, in addition to a suggestive causal effect of greater genetic liability to Alzheimer's disease on smaller accumbens. Functional analyses implicated neurogenesis, neuron differentiation and development in basal ganglia volumes. These results enhance our understanding of the genetic architecture and molecular associations of basal ganglia structure and their role in brain disorders.

34,794 British ancestry individuals

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

34794
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
European
Ancestry
U.K.
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of health and genetic findings

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Analysis In Progress

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