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A polygenic resilience score moderates the genetic risk for schizophrenia.pdf (2.5 MB)

A polygenic resilience score moderates the genetic risk for schizophrenia

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-01-16, 17:16 authored by Jonathan L Hess, Kieran MurphyKieran Murphy, John WaddingtonJohn Waddington, Stephen J Glatt
Based on the discovery by the Resilience Project (Chen R. et al. Nat Biotechnol 34:531–538, 2016) of rare variants that confer resistance to Mendelian disease, and protective alleles for some complex diseases, we posited the existence of genetic variants that promote resilience to highly heritable polygenic disorders1,0 such as schizophrenia. Resilience has been traditionally viewed as a psychological construct, although our use of the term resilience refers to a different construct that directly relates to the Resilience Project, namely: heritable variation that promotes resistance to disease by reducing the penetrance of risk loci, wherein resilience and risk loci operate orthogonal to one another. In this study, we established a procedure to identify unaffected individuals with relatively high polygenic risk for schizophrenia, and contrasted them with risk-matched schizophrenia cases to generate the first known “polygenic resilience score” that represents the additive contributions to SZ resistance by variants that are distinct from risk loci. The resilience score was derived from data compiled by the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium, and replicated in three independent samples. This work establishes a generalizable framework for finding resilience variants for any complex, heritable disorder.

Funding

U.S. National Institutes of Health (5R01MH101519, 5R01AG054002)

Sidney R. Baer, Jr. Foundation

NARSAD: The Brain & Behavior Research Foundation

K.G. Jebsen Centre for Research on Neuropsychiatric Disorders, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway

European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme for research, technological development and demonstration under grant agreement number 602805

European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement number 667302

NIMH grants 5R01MH101519 and U01 MH109536-01

U.S. National Institutes of Health (U10 AA008401; U01 MH109532)

Netherlands Scientific Organization (NOW; 480-05-003)

Dutch Brain Foundation

VU University

The Lundbeck Foundation (grant no R102-A9118 and R155-2014-1724)

Stanley Medical Research Institute

Danish Strategic Research Council

Novo Nordisk Foundation

Advanced Grant from the European Research Council (project no: 294838)

Aarhus University

History

Data Availability Statement

Genome-wide association summary statistics for all 1.9 million SNPs can be downloaded from: https://www.dropbox.com/sh/qhqbkcwvgzuwho3/AAClnqCvIdxIRsaklOLMGDLra?dl=0. The data used in this study were provided under restricted access by the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium (PGC), Lundbeck Foundation Initiative for Integrative Psychiatric Research (iPSYCH), and deCODE Genetics, Inc. Only summary statistics were made available to us from deCODE Genetics, Inc. We were granted access to imputed genome-wide SNP genotypes by PGC and iPSYCH. The data sets from PGC and iPSYCH remained on the Genetic Cluster Computer and GenomeDK cluster, respectively, where statistical analyses were performed.

Comments

The original article is available at https://www.nature.com/

Published Citation

Hess JL. et al. A polygenic resilience score moderates the genetic risk for schizophrenia. Mol Psychiatry. 2021;26(3):800-815.

Publication Date

6 September 2019

PubMed ID

31492941

Department/Unit

  • Beaumont Hospital
  • Psychiatry
  • School of Pharmacy and Biomolecular Sciences

Research Area

  • Neurological and Psychiatric Disorders

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group Specialist Journals

Version

  • Published Version (Version of Record)