Increased burden of ultra-rare protein-altering variants among 4,877 individuals with schizophrenia

By analyzing the exomes of 12,332 unrelated Swedish individuals – including 4,877 affected with schizophrenia – in ways informed by exome sequences from 45,376 other individuals, we identified 244,246 coding-sequence and splice-site ultra-rare variants (URVs) that were unique to individual Swedes. W...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Genovese, Giulio, Fromer, Menachem, Stahl, Eli A., Ruderfer, Douglas M., Chambert, Kimberly, Landén, Mikael, Moran, Jennifer L., Purcell, Shaun M., Sklar, Pamela, Sullivan, Patrick F., Hultman, Christina M., McCarroll, Steven A.
Format: Online
Language:English
Published: 2016
Online Access:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5104192/
Description
Summary:By analyzing the exomes of 12,332 unrelated Swedish individuals – including 4,877 affected with schizophrenia – in ways informed by exome sequences from 45,376 other individuals, we identified 244,246 coding-sequence and splice-site ultra-rare variants (URVs) that were unique to individual Swedes. We found that gene-disruptive and putatively protein-damaging URVs (but not synonymous URVs) were more abundant in schizophrenia cases than controls (P = 1.3 × 10−10). This elevation of protein-compromising URVs was several times larger than an analogously elevated rate for de novo mutations, suggesting that most rare-variant effects on schizophrenia risk are inherited. Among individuals with schizophrenia, the elevated frequency of protein-compromising URVs was concentrated in brain-expressed genes, particularly in neuronally expressed genes; most of this genetic signal arose from large sets of genes whose RNAs have been found to interact with synaptically localized proteins. Our results suggest that synaptic dysfunction may mediate a large fraction of strong, individually rare genetic influences on schizophrenia risk.