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Browsing by Author "Breen, Gerome"
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Item Examining Sex-Differentiated Genetic Effects Across Neuropsychiatric and Behavioral Traits(Elsevier, 2021-06-15) Martin, Joanna; Khramtsova, Ekaterina A.; Goleva, Slavina B.; Blokland, Gabriëlla A.M.; Traglia, Michela; Walters, Raymond K.; Hübel, Christopher; Coleman, Jonathan R.I.; Breen, Gerome; Børglum, Anders D.; Demontis, Ditte; Grove, Jakob; Werge, Thomas; Bralten, Janita; Bulik, Cynthia M.; Lee, Phil H.; Mathews, Carol A.; Peterson, Roseann E.; Winham, Stacey J.; Wray, Naomi; Edenberg, Howard J.; Guo, Wei; Yao, Yin; Neale, Benjamin M.; Faraone, Stephen V.; Petryshen, Tracey L.; Weiss, Lauren A.; Duncan, Laramie E.; Goldstein, Jill M.; Smoller, Jordan W.; Stranger, Barbara E.; Davis, Lea K.; Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, School of MedicineBackground: The origin of sex differences in prevalence and presentation of neuropsychiatric and behavioral traits is largely unknown. Given established genetic contributions and correlations, we tested for a sex-differentiated genetic architecture within and between traits. Methods: Using European ancestry genome-wide association summary statistics for 20 neuropsychiatric and behavioral traits, we tested for sex differences in single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP)-based heritability and genetic correlation (rg < 1). For each trait, we computed per-SNP z scores from sex-stratified regression coefficients and identified genes with sex-differentiated effects using a gene-based approach. We calculated correlation coefficients between z scores to test for shared sex-differentiated effects. Finally, we tested for sex differences in across-trait genetic correlations. Results: We observed no consistent sex differences in SNP-based heritability. Between-sex, within-trait genetic correlations were high, although <1 for educational attainment and risk-taking behavior. We identified 4 genes with significant sex-differentiated effects across 3 traits. Several trait pairs shared sex-differentiated effects. The top genes with sex-differentiated effects were enriched for multiple gene sets, including neuron- and synapse-related sets. Most between-trait genetic correlation estimates were not significantly different between sexes, with exceptions (educational attainment and risk-taking behavior). Conclusions: Sex differences in the common autosomal genetic architecture of neuropsychiatric and behavioral phenotypes are small and polygenic and unlikely to fully account for observed sex-differentiated attributes. Larger sample sizes are needed to identify sex-differentiated effects for most traits. For well-powered studies, we identified genes with sex-differentiated effects that were enriched for neuron-related and other biological functions. This work motivates further investigation of genetic and environmental influences on sex differences.Item Genome-wide association study of more than 40,000 bipolar disorder cases provides new insights into the underlying biology(Springer Nature, 2021-06) Mullins, Niamh; Forstner, Andreas J.; O'Connell, Kevin S.; Coombes, Brandon; Coleman, Jonathan R.I.; Qiao, Zhen; Als, Thomas D.; Bigdeli, Tim B.; Børte, Sigrid; Bryois, Julien; Charney, Alexander W.; Drange, Ole Kristian; Gandal, Michael J.; Hagenaars, Saskia P.; Ikeda, Masashi; Kamitaki, Nolan; Kim, Minsoo; Krebs, Kristi; Panagiotaropoulou, Georgia; Schilder, Brian M.; Sloofman, Laura G.; Steinberg, Stacy; Trubetskoy, Vassily; Winsvold, Bendik S.; Won, Hong-Hee; Abramova, Liliya; Adorjan, Kristina; Agerbo, Esben; Al Eissa, Mariam; Albani, Diego; Alliey-Rodriguez, Ney; Anjorin, Adebayo; Antilla, Verneri; Antoniou, Anastasia; Awasthi, Swapnil; Baek, Ji Hyun; Bækvad-Hansen, Marie; Bass, Nicholas; Bauer, Michael; Beins, Eva C.; Bergen, Sarah E.; Birner, Armin; Pedersen, Carsten Bøcker; Bøen, Erlend; Boks, Marco P.; Bosch, Rosa; Brum, Murielle; Brumpton, Ben M.; Brunkhorst-Kanaan, Nathalie; Budde, Monika; Bybjerg-Grauholm, Jonas; Byerley, William; Cairns, Murray; Casas, Miquel; Cervantes, Pablo; Clarke, Toni-Kim; Cruceanu, Cristiana; Cuellar-Barboza, Alfredo; Cunningham, Julie; Curtis, David; Czerski, Piotr M.; Dale, Anders M.; Dalkner, Nina; David, Friederike S.; Degenhardt, Franziska; Djurovic, Srdjan; Dobbyn, Amanda L.; Douzenis, Athanassios; Elvsåshagen, Torbjørn; Escott-Price, Valentina; Ferrier, I. Nicol; Fiorentino, Alessia; Foroud, Tatiana M.; Forty, Liz; Frank, Josef; Frei, Oleksandr; Freimer, Nelson B.; Frisén, Louise; Gade, Katrin; Garnham, Julie; Gelernter, Joel; Pedersen, Marianne Giørtz; Gizer, Ian R.; Gordon, Scott D.; Gordon-Smith, Katherine; Greenwood, Tiffany A.; Grove, Jakob; Guzman-Parra, José; Ha, Kyooseob; Haraldsson, Magnus; Hautzinger, Martin; Heilbronner, Urs; Hellgren, Dennis; Herms, Stefan; Hoffmann, Per; Holmans, Peter A.; Huckins, Laura; Jamain, Stéphane; Johnson, Jessica S.; Kalman, Janos L.; Kamatani, Yoichiro; Kennedy, James L.; Kittel-Schneider, Sarah; Knowles, James A.; Kogevinas, Manolis; Koromina, Maria; Kranz, Thorsten M.; Kranzler, Henry R.; Kubo, Michiaki; Kupka, Ralph; Kushner, Steven A.; Lavebratt, Catharina; Lawrence, Jacob; Leber, Markus; Lee, Heon-Jeong; Lee, Phil H.; Levy, Shawn E.; Lewis, Catrin; Liao, Calwing; Lucae, Susanne; Lundberg, Martin; MacIntyre, Donald J.; Magnusson, Sigurdur H.; Maier, Wolfgang; Maihofer, Adam; Malaspina, Dolores; Maratou, Eirini; Martinsson, Lina; Mattheisen, Manuel; McCarroll, Steven A.; McGregor, Nathaniel W.; McGuffin, Peter; McKay, James D.; Medeiros, Helena; Medland, Sarah E.; Millischer, Vincent; Montgomery, Grant W.; Moran, Jennifer L.; Morris, Derek W.; Mühleisen, Thomas W.; O'Brien, Niamh; O'Donovan, Claire; Loohuis, Loes M. Olde; Oruc, Lilijana; Papiol, Sergi; Pardiñas, Antonio F.; Perry, Amy; Pfennig, Andrea; Porichi, Evgenia; Potash, James B.; Quested, Digby; Raj, Towfique; Rapaport, Mark H.; DePaulo, J. Raymond; Regeer, Eline J.; Rice, John P.; Rivas, Fabio; Rivera, Margarita; Roth, Julian; Roussos, Panos; Ruderfer, Douglas M.; Sánchez-Mora, Cristina; Schulte, Eva C.; Senner, Fanny; Sharp, Sally; Shilling, Paul D.; Sigurdsson, Engilbert; Sirignano, Lea; Slaney, Claire; Smeland, Olav B.; Smith, Daniel J.; Sobell, Janet L.; Søholm Hansen, Christine; Artigas, Maria Soler; Spijker, Anne T.; Stein, Dan J.; Strauss, John S.; Świątkowska, Beata; Terao, Chikashi; Thorgeirsson, Thorgeir E.; Toma, Claudio; Tooney, Paul; Tsermpini, Evangelia-Eirini; Vawter, Marquis P.; Vedder, Helmut; Walters, James T.R.; Witt, Stephanie H.; Xi, Simon; Xu, Wei; Yang, Jessica Mei Kay; Young, Allan H.; Young, Hannah; Zandi, Peter P.; Zhou, Hang; Zillich, Lea; Adolfsson, Rolf; Agartz, Ingrid; Alda, Martin; Alfredsson, Lars; Babadjanova, Gulja; Backlund, Lena; Baune, Bernhard T.; Bellivier, Frank; Bengesser, Susanne; Berrettini, Wade H.; Blackwood, Douglas H.R.; Boehnke, Michael; Børglum, Anders D.; Breen, Gerome; Carr, Vaughan J.; Catts, Stanley; Corvin, Aiden; Craddock, Nicholas; Dannlowski, Udo; Dikeos, Dimitris; Esko, Tõnu; Etain, Bruno; Ferentinos, Panagiotis; Frye, Mark; Fullerton, Janice M.; Gawlik, Micha; Gershon, Elliot S.; Goes, Fernando S.; Green, Melissa J.; Grigoroiu-Serbanescu, Maria; Hauser, Joanna; Henskens, Frans; Hillert, Jan; Hong, Kyung Sue; Hougaard, David M.; Hultman, Christina M.; Hveem, Kristian; Iwata, Nakao; Jablensky, Assen V.; Jones, Ian; Jones, Lisa A.; Kahn, René S.; Kelsoe, John R.; Kirov, George; Landén, Mikael; Leboyer, Marion; Lewis, Cathryn M.; Li, Qingqin S.; Lissowska, Jolanta; Lochner, Christine; Loughland, Carmel; Martin, Nicholas G.; Mathews, Carol A.; Mayoral, Fermin; McElroy, Susan L.; McIntosh, Andrew M.; McMahon, Francis J.; Melle, Ingrid; Michie, Patricia; Milani, Lili; Mitchell, Philip B.; Morken, Gunnar; Mors, Ole; Mortensen, Preben Bo; Mowry, Bryan; Müller-Myhsok, Bertram; Myers, Richard M.; Neale, Benjamin M.; Nievergelt, Caroline M.; Nordentoft, Merete; Nöthen, Markus M.; O'Donovan, Michael C.; Oedegaard, Ketil J.; Olsson, Tomas; Owen, Michael J.; Paciga, Sara A.; Pantelis, Chris; Pato, Carlos; Pato, Michele T.; Patrinos, George P.; Perlis, Roy H.; Posthuma, Danielle; Ramos-Quiroga, Josep Antoni; Reif, Andreas; Reininghaus, Eva Z.; Ribasés, Marta; Rietschel, Marcella; Ripke, Stephan; Rouleau, Guy A.; Saito, Takeo; Schall, Ulrich; Schalling, Martin; Schofield, Peter R.; Schulze, Thomas G.; Scott, Laura J.; Scott, Rodney J.; Serretti, Alessandro; Weickert, Cynthia Shannon; Smoller, Jordan W.; Stefansson, Hreinn; Stefansson, Kari; Stordal, Eystein; Streit, Fabian; Sullivan, Patrick F.; Turecki, Gustavo; Vaaler, Arne E.; Vieta, Eduard; Vincent, John B.; Waldman, Irwin D.; Weickert, Thomas W.; Werge, Thomas; Wray, Naomi R.; Zwart, John-Anker; Biernacka, Joanna M.; Nurnberger, John I.; Cichon, Sven; Edenberg, Howard J.; Stahl, Eli A.; McQuillin, Andrew; Florio, Arianna Di; Ophoff, Roel A.; Andreassen, Ole A.; Medical and Molecular Genetics, School of MedicineBipolar disorder is a heritable mental illness with complex etiology. We performed a genome-wide association study of 41,917 bipolar disorder cases and 371,549 controls of European ancestry, which identified 64 associated genomic loci. Bipolar disorder risk alleles were enriched in genes in synaptic signaling pathways and brain-expressed genes, particularly those with high specificity of expression in neurons of the prefrontal cortex and hippocampus. Significant signal enrichment was found in genes encoding targets of antipsychotics, calcium channel blockers, antiepileptics and anesthetics. Integrating expression quantitative trait locus data implicated 15 genes robustly linked to bipolar disorder via gene expression, encoding druggable targets such as HTR6, MCHR1, DCLK3 and FURIN. Analyses of bipolar disorder subtypes indicated high but imperfect genetic correlation between bipolar disorder type I and II and identified additional associated loci. Together, these results advance our understanding of the biological etiology of bipolar disorder, identify novel therapeutic leads and prioritize genes for functional follow-up studies.Item GWAS Meta-Analysis of Suicide Attempt: Identification of 12 Genome-Wide Significant Loci and Implication of Genetic Risks for Specific Health Factors(American Psychiatric Association, 2023) Docherty, Anna R.; Mullins, Niamh; Ashley-Koch, Allison E.; Qin, Xuejun; Coleman, Jonathan R. I.; Shabalin, Andrey; Kang, JooEun; Murnyak, Balasz; Wendt, Frank; Adams, Mark; Campos, Adrian I.; DiBlasi, Emily; Fullerton, Janice M.; Kranzler, Henry R.; Bakian, Amanda V.; Monson, Eric T.; Rentería, Miguel E.; Walss-Bass, Consuelo; Andreassen, Ole A.; Behera, Chittaranjan; Bulik, Cynthia M.; Edenberg, Howard J.; Kessler, Ronald C.; Mann, J. John; Nurnberger, John I., Jr.; Pistis, Giorgio; Streit, Fabian; Ursano, Robert J.; Polimanti, Renato; Dennis, Michelle; Garrett, Melanie; Hair, Lauren; Harvey, Philip; Hauser, Elizabeth R.; Hauser, Michael A.; Huffman, Jennifer; Jacobson, Daniel; Madduri, Ravi; McMahon, Benjamin; Oslin, David W.; Trafton, Jodie; Awasthi, Swapnil; Berrettini, Wade H.; Bohus, Martin; Chang, Xiao; Chen, Hsi-Chung; Chen, Wei J.; Christensen, Erik D.; Crow, Scott; Duriez, Philibert; Edwards, Alexis C.; Fernández-Aranda, Fernando; Galfalvy, Hanga; Gandal, Michael; Gorwood, Philip; Guo, Yiran; Hafferty, Jonathan D.; Hakonarson, Hakon; Halmi, Katherine A.; Hishimoto, Akitoyo; Jain, Sonia; Jamain, Stéphane; Jiménez-Murcia, Susana; Johnson, Craig; Kaplan, Allan S.; Kaye, Walter H.; Keel, Pamela K.; Kennedy, James L.; Kim, Minsoo; Klump, Kelly L.; Levey, Daniel F.; Li, Dong; Liao, Shih-Cheng; Lieb, Klaus; Lilenfeld, Lisa; Marshall, Christian R.; Mitchell, James E.; Okazaki, Satoshi; Otsuka, Ikuo; Pinto, Dalila; Powers, Abigail; Ramoz, Nicolas; Ripke, Stephan; Roepke, Stefan; Rozanov, Vsevolod; Scherer, Stephen W.; Schmahl, Christian; Sokolowski, Marcus; Starnawska, Anna; Strober, Michael; Su, Mei-Hsin; Thornton, Laura M.; Treasure, Janet; Ware, Erin B.; Watson, Hunna J.; Witt, Stephanie H.; Woodside, D. Blake; Yilmaz, Zeynep; Zillich, Lea; Adolfsson, Rolf; Agartz, Ingrid; Alda, Martin; Alfredsson, Lars; Appadurai, Vivek; Artigas, María Soler; Van der Auwera, Sandra; Azevedo, M. Helena; Bass, Nicholas; Bau, Claiton H. D.; Baune, Bernhard T.; Bellivier, Frank; Berger, Klaus; Biernacka, Joanna M.; Bigdeli, Tim B.; Binder, Elisabeth B.; Boehnke, Michael; Boks, Marco P.; Braff, David L.; Bryant, Richard; Budde, Monika; Byrne, Enda M.; Cahn, Wiepke; Castelao, Enrique; Cervilla, Jorge A.; Chaumette, Boris; Corvin, Aiden; Craddock, Nicholas; Djurovic, Srdjan; Foo, Jerome C.; Forstner, Andreas J.; Frye, Mark; Gatt, Justine M.; Giegling, Ina; Grabe, Hans J.; Green, Melissa J.; Grevet, Eugenio H.; Grigoroiu-Serbanescu, Maria; Gutierrez, Blanca; Guzman-Parra, Jose; Hamshere, Marian L.; Hartmann, Annette M.; Hauser, Joanna; Heilmann-Heimbach, Stefanie; Hoffmann, Per; Ising, Marcus; Jones, Ian; Jones, Lisa A.; Jonsson, Lina; Kahn, René S.; Kelsoe, John R.; Kendler, Kenneth S.; Kloiber, Stefan; Koenen, Karestan C.; Kogevinas, Manolis; Krebs, Marie-Odile; Landén, Mikael; Leboyer, Marion; Lee, Phil H.; Levinson, Douglas F.; Liao, Calwing; Lissowska, Jolanta; Mayoral, Fermin; McElroy, Susan L.; McGrath, Patrick; McGuffin, Peter; McQuillin, Andrew; Mehta, Divya; Melle, Ingrid; Mitchell, Philip B.; Molina, Esther; Morken, Gunnar; Nievergelt, Caroline; Nöthen, Markus M.; O'Donovan, Michael C.; Ophoff, Roel A.; Owen, Michael J.; Pato, Carlos; Pato, Michele T.; Penninx, Brenda W. J. H.; Potash, James B.; Power, Robert A.; Preisig, Martin; Quested, Digby; Ramos-Quiroga, Josep Antoni; Reif, Andreas; Ribasés, Marta; Richarte, Vanesa; Rietschel, Marcella; Rivera, Margarita; Roberts, Andrea; Roberts, Gloria; Rouleau, Guy A.; Rovaris, Diego L.; Sanders, Alan R.; Schofield, Peter R.; Schulze, Thomas G.; Scott, Laura J.; Serretti, Alessandro; Shi, Jianxin; Sirignano, Lea; Sklar, Pamela; Smeland, Olav B.; Smoller, Jordan W.; Sonuga-Barke, Edmund J. S.; Trzaskowski, Maciej; Tsuang, Ming T.; Turecki, Gustavo; Vilar-Ribó, Laura; Vincent, John B.; Völzke, Henry; Walters, James T. R.; Weickert, Cynthia Shannon; Weickert, Thomas W.; Weissman, Myrna M.; Williams, Leanne M.; Wray, Naomi R.; Zai, Clement C.; Agerbo, Esben; Børglum, Anders D.; Breen, Gerome; Demontis, Ditte; Erlangsen, Annette; Gelernter, Joel; Glatt, Stephen J.; Hougaard, David M.; Hwu, Hai-Gwo; Kuo, Po-Hsiu; Lewis, Cathryn M.; Li, Qingqin S.; Liu, Chih-Min; Martin, Nicholas G.; McIntosh, Andrew M.; Medland, Sarah E.; Mors, Ole; Nordentoft, Merete; Olsen, Catherine M.; Porteous, David; Smith, Daniel J.; Stahl, Eli A.; Stein, Murray B.; Wasserman, Danuta; Werge, Thomas; Whiteman, David C.; Willour, Virginia; VA Million Veteran Program (MVP); MVP Suicide Exemplar Workgroup; Suicide Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium; Major Depressive Disorder Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium; Bipolar Disorder Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium; Schizophrenia Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium; Eating Disorder Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium; German Borderline Genomics Consortium; Coon, Hilary; Beckham, Jean C.; Kimbrel, Nathan A.; Ruderfer, Douglas M.; Psychiatry, School of MedicineObjective: Suicidal behavior is heritable and is a major cause of death worldwide. Two large-scale genome-wide association studies (GWASs) recently discovered and cross-validated genome-wide significant (GWS) loci for suicide attempt (SA). The present study leveraged the genetic cohorts from both studies to conduct the largest GWAS meta-analysis of SA to date. Multi-ancestry and admixture-specific meta-analyses were conducted within groups of significant African, East Asian, and European ancestry admixtures. Methods: This study comprised 22 cohorts, including 43,871 SA cases and 915,025 ancestry-matched controls. Analytical methods across multi-ancestry and individual ancestry admixtures included inverse variance-weighted fixed-effects meta-analyses, followed by gene, gene-set, tissue-set, and drug-target enrichment, as well as summary-data-based Mendelian randomization with brain expression quantitative trait loci data, phenome-wide genetic correlation, and genetic causal proportion analyses. Results: Multi-ancestry and European ancestry admixture GWAS meta-analyses identified 12 risk loci at p values <5×10-8. These loci were mostly intergenic and implicated DRD2, SLC6A9, FURIN, NLGN1, SOX5, PDE4B, and CACNG2. The multi-ancestry SNP-based heritability estimate of SA was 5.7% on the liability scale (SE=0.003, p=5.7×10-80). Significant brain tissue gene expression and drug set enrichment were observed. There was shared genetic variation of SA with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, smoking, and risk tolerance after conditioning SA on both major depressive disorder and posttraumatic stress disorder. Genetic causal proportion analyses implicated shared genetic risk for specific health factors. Conclusions: This multi-ancestry analysis of suicide attempt identified several loci contributing to risk and establishes significant shared genetic covariation with clinical phenotypes. These findings provide insight into genetic factors associated with suicide attempt across ancestry admixture populations, in veteran and civilian populations, and in attempt versus death.Item Psychiatric Genomics: An Update and an Agenda(American Psychiatric Association, 2018-01-01) Sullivan, Patrick F.; Agrawal, Arpana; Bulik, Cynthia M.; Andreassen, Ole A.; Børglum, Anders D.; Breen, Gerome; Cichon, Sven; Edenberg, Howard J.; Faraone, Stephen V.; Gelernter, Joel; Mathews, Carol A.; Nievergelt, Caroline M.; Smoller, Jordan W.; O’Donovan, Michael C.; Psychiatric Genomics Consortium; Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, School of MedicineThe Psychiatric Genomics Consortium (PGC) is the largest consortium in the history of psychiatry. This global effort is dedicated to rapid progress and open science, and in the past decade it has delivered an increasing flow of new knowledge about the fundamental basis of common psychiatric disorders. The PGC has recently commenced a program of research designed to deliver "actionable" findings-genomic results that 1) reveal fundamental biology, 2) inform clinical practice, and 3) deliver new therapeutic targets. The central idea of the PGC is to convert the family history risk factor into biologically, clinically, and therapeutically meaningful insights. The emerging findings suggest that we are entering a phase of accelerated genetic discovery for multiple psychiatric disorders. These findings are likely to elucidate the genetic portions of these truly complex traits, and this knowledge can then be mined for its relevance for improved therapeutics and its impact on psychiatric practice within a precision medicine framework. [AJP at 175: Remembering Our Past As We Envision Our Future November 1946: The Genetic Theory of Schizophrenia Franz Kallmann's influential twin study of schizophrenia in 691 twin pairs was the largest in the field for nearly four decades.Item Shared Genetic Risk between Eating Disorder and Substance Use-Related Phenotypes: Evidence from Genome-Wide Association Studies(Wiley, 2021) Munn-Chernoff, Melissa A.; Johnson, Emma C.; Chou, Yi-Ling; Coleman, Jonathan R.I.; Thornton, Laura M.; Walters, Raymond K.; Yilmaz, Zeynep; Baker, Jessica H.; Hübel, Christopher; Gordon, Scott; Medland, Sarah E.; Watson, Hunna J.; Gaspar, Héléna A.; Bryois, Julien; Hinney, Anke; Leppä, Virpi M.; Mattheisen, Manuel; Ripke, Stephan; Yao, Shuyang; Giusti-Rodríguez, Paola; Hanscombe, Ken B.; Adan, Roger A.H.; Alfredsson, Lars; Ando, Tetsuya; Andreassen, Ole A.; Berrettini, Wade H.; Boehm, Ilka; Boni, Claudette; Perica, Vesna Boraska; Buehren, Katharina; Burghardt, Roland; Cassina, Matgteo; Cichon, Sven; Clementi, Maurizio; Cone, Roger D.; Courtet, Philippe; Crow, Scott; Crowley, James J.; Danner, Unna N.; Davis, Oliver S.P.; de Zwaan, Martina; Dedoussis, George; Degortes, Daniela; DeSocio, Janiece E.; Dick, Danielle M.; Dikeos, Dimitris; Dina, Christian; Dmitrzak-Weglarz, Monika; Docampo, Elisa; Duncan, Laramie E.; Egberts, Karin; Ehrlich, Stefan; Escaramís, Geòrgia; Esko, Tõnu; Estivill, Xavier; Farmer, Anne; Favaro, Angela; Fernández-Aranda, Fernando; Fichter, Manfred M.; Fischer, Krista; Föcker, Manuel; Foretova, Lenka; Forstner, Andreas J.; Forzan, Monica; Franklin, Christopher S.; Gallinger, Steven; Giegling, Ina; Giuranna, Johanna; Gonidakis, Fragiskos; Gorwood, Philip; Gratacos Mayora, Monica; Guillaume, Sébastien; Guo, Yiran; Hakonarson, Hakon; Hatzikotoulas, Konstantinos; Hauser, Joanna; Hebebrand, Johannes; Helder, Sietske G.; Herms, Stefan; Herpertz-Dahlmann, Beate; Herzog, Wolfgang; Huckins, Laura M.; Hudson, James I.; Imgart, Hartmut; Inoko, Hidetoshi; Janout, Vladimir; Jiménez-Murcia, Susana; Julià, Antonio; Kalsi, Gursharan; Kaminská, Deborah; Karhunen, Leila; Karwautz, Andreas; Kas, Martien J.H.; Kennedy, James L.; Keski-Rahkonen, Anna; Kiezebrink, Kirsty; Kim, Youl-Ri; Klump, Kelly L.; Knudsen, Gun Peggy S.; La Via, Maria C.; Le Hellard, Stephanie; Levitan, Robert D.; Li, Dong; Lilenfeld, Lisa; Lin, Bochao Danae; Lissowska, Jolanta; Luykx, Jurjen; Magistretti, Pierre J.; Maj, Mario; Mannik, Katrin; Marsal, Sara; Marshall, Christian R.; Mattingsdal, Morten; McDevitt, Sara; McGuffin, Peter; Metspalu, Andres; Meulenbelt, Ingrid; Micali, Nadia; Mitchell, Karen; Monteleone, Alessio Maria; Monteleone, Palmiero; Nacmias, Benedetta; Navratilova, Marie; Ntalla, Ioanna; O’Toole, Julie K.; Ophoff, Roel A.; Padyukov, Leonid; Palotie, Aarno; Pantel, Jacques; Papezova, Hana; Pinto, Dalila; Rabionet, Raquel; Raevuori, Anu; Ramoz, Nicolas; Reichborn-Kjennerud, Ted; Ricca, Valdo; Ripatti, Samuli; Ritschel, Franziska; Roberts, Marion; Rotondo, Alessandro; Rujescu, Dan; Rybakowski, Filip; Santonastaso, Paolo; Scherag, André; Scherer, Stephen W.; Schmidt, Ulrike; Schork, Nicholas J.; Schosser, Alexandra; Seitz, Jochen; Slachtova, Lenka; Slagboom, P. Eline; Slof-Op’t Landt, Margarita C.T.; Slopien, Agnieszka; Sorbi, Sandro; Świątkowska, Beata; Szatkiewicz, Jin P.; Tachmazidou, Ioanna; Tenconi, Elena; Tortorella, Alfonso; Tozzi, Federica; Treasure, Janet; Tsitsika, Artemis; Tyszkiewicz-Nwafor, Marta; Tziouvas, Konstantinos; van Elburg, Annemarie A.; van Furth, Eric F.; Wagner, Gudrun; Walton, Esther; Widen, Elisabeth; Zeggini, Eleftheria; Zerwas, Stephanie; Zipfel, Stephan; Bergen, Andrew W.; Boden, Joseph M.; Brandt, Harry; Crawford, Steven; Halmi, Katherine A.; Horwood, L. John; Johnson, Craig; Kaplan, Allan S.; Kaye, Walter H.; Mitchell, James; Olsen, Catherine M.; Pearson, John F.; Pedersen, Nancy L.; Strober, Michael; Werge, Thomas; Whiteman, David C.; Woodside, D. Blake; Stuber, Garret D.; Grove, Jakob; Henders, Anjali K.; Larsen, Janne T.; Parker, Richard; Petersen, Liselotte V.; Jordan, Jennifer; Kennedy, Martin A.; Birgegård, Andreas; Lichtenstein, Paul; Norring, Claes; Landén, Mikael; Mortensen, Preben Bo; Polimanti, Renato; McClintick, Jeanette N.; Adams, Mark J.; Adkins, Amy E.; Aliev, Fazil; Bacanu, Silviu-Alin; Batzler, Anthony; Bertelsen, Sarah; Biernacka, Joanna M.; Bigdeli, Tim B.; Chen, Li-Shiun; Clarke, Toni-Kim; Degenhardt, Franziska; Docherty, Anna R.; Edwards, Alexis C.; Foo, Jerome C.; Fox, Louis; Frank, Josef; Hack, Laura M.; Hartmann, Annette M.; Hartz, Sarah M.; Heilmann-Heimbach, Stefanie; Hodgkinson, Colin; Hoffmann, Per; Hottenga, Jouke-Jan; Konte, Bettina; Lahti, Jari; Lahti-Pulkkinen, Marius; Lai, Dongbing; Ligthart, Lannie; Loukola, Anu; Maher, Marion S.; Mbarek, Hamdi; McIntosh, Andrew M.; McQueen, Matthew B.; Meyers, Jacquelyn L.; Milaneschi, Yuri; Palviainen, Teemu; Peterson, Roseann E.; Ryu, Euijung; Saccone, Nancy L.; Salvatore, Jessica E.; Sanchez-Roige, Sandra; Schwandt, Melanie; Sherva, Richard; Streit, Fabian; Strohmaier, Jana; Thomas, Nathaniel; Wang, Jen-Chyong; Webb, Bradley T.; Wedow, Robbee; Wetherill, Leah; Wills, Amanda G.; Zhou, Hang; Boardman, Jason D.; Chen, Danfeng; Choi, Doo-Sup; Copeland, William E.; Culverhouse, Robert C.; Dahmen, Norbert; Degenhardt, Louisa; Domingue, Benjamin W.; Frye, Mark A.; Gäbel, Wolfgang; Hayward, Caroline; Ising, Marcus; Keyes, Margaret; Kiefer, Falk; Koller, Gabrielle; Kramer, John; Kuperman, Samuel; Lucae, Susanne; Lynskey, Michael T.; Maier, Wolfgang; Mann, Karl; Männistö, Satu; Müller-Myhsok, Bertram; Murray, Alison D.; Nurnberger, John I.; Preuss, Ulrich; Räikkönen, Katri; Reynolds, Maureen D.; Ridinger, Monika; Scherbaum, Norbert; Schuckit, Marc A.; Soyka, Michael; Treutlein, Jens; Witt, Stephanie H.; Wodarz, Norbert; Zill, Peter; Adkins, Daniel E.; Boomsma, Dorret I.; Bierut, Laura J.; Brown, Sandra A.; Bucholz, Kathleen K.; Costello, E. Jane; de Wit, Harriet; Diazgranados, Nancy; Eriksson, Johan G.; Farrer, Lindsay A.; Foroud, Tatiana M.; Gillespie, Nathan A.; Goate, Alison M.; Goldman, David; Grucza, Richard A.; Hancock, Dana B.; Mullan Harris, Kathleen; Hesselbrock, Victor; Hewitt, John K.; Hopfer, Christian; Iacono, William G.; Johnson, Eric O.; Karpyak, Victor M.; Kendler, Kenneth S.; Kranzler, Henry R.; Krauter, Kenneth; Lind, Penelope A.; McGue, Matt; MacKillop, James; Madden, Pamela A.F.; Maes, Hermine H.; Magnusson, Patrik K.E.; Nelson, Elliot C.; Nöthen, Markus M.; Palmer, Abraham A.; Penninx, Brenda W.J.H.; Porjesz, Bernice; Rice, John P.; Rietschel, Marcella; Riley, Brien P.; Rose, Richard J.; Shen, Pei-Hong; Silberg, Judy; Stallings, Michael C.; Tarter, Ralph E.; Vanyukov, Michael M.; Vrieze, Scott; Wall, Tamara L.; Whitfield, John B.; Zhao, Hongyu; Neale, Benjamin M.; Wade, Tracey D.; Heath, Andrew C.; Montgomery, Grant W.; Martin, Nicholas G.; Sullivan, Patrick F.; Kaprio, Jaakko; Breen, Gerome; Gelernter, Joel; Edenberg, Howard J.; Bulik, Cynthia M.; Agrawal, Arpana; Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, School of MedicineEating disorders and substance use disorders frequently co-occur. Twin studies reveal shared genetic risk between eating disorders and substance use, with the strongest associations between symptoms of bulimia nervosa (BN) and problem alcohol use, mainly abuse and dependence (twin-based genetic correlation [rg]=0.23–0.53). Analytic advances facilitate the computation of genetic correlations using summary statistics from existing genome-wide association studies (GWAS). We investigated shared genetic risk between eating disorder and substance use and disorder phenotypes using GWAS data. Four eating disorder phenotypes (anorexia nervosa [AN], AN with binge-eating, AN without binge-eating, and a BN factor score), and eight substance use-related phenotypes (drinks per week, alcohol use disorder [AUD], smoking initiation, current smoking, cigarettes per day, nicotine dependence, cannabis initiation, and cannabis use disorder) from eight studies were included. Total sample sizes per phenotype ranged from ~2,400 to ~537,000 individuals. We used linkage disequilibrium score regression to calculate single nucleotide polymorphism-based genetic correlations between eating disorder and substance use-related phenotypes. Significant positive genetic associations emerged between AUD and AN (rg=0.18; false discovery rate q=0.0006), cannabis initiation and AN (rg=0.23; q<0.0001), and cannabis initiation and AN with binge-eating (rg=0.27; q=0.0016). Conversely, significant negative genetic correlations were observed between three non-diagnostic smoking phenotypes (smoking initiation, smoking cessation, and cigarettes per day) and AN without binge-eating (rgs=−0.19 to −0.23; qs<0.04). The observed patterns of association between different eating disorder and substance use-related phenotypes highlights the potentially complex and substance-specific relationships between these behaviors associated with significant public health burden.Item Translating genome-wide association findings into new therapeutics for psychiatry(Nature, 2016-11) Breen, Gerome; Li, Qingqin; Roth, Bryan L.; O'Donnell, Patricio; Didriksen, Michael; Dolmetsch, Ricardo; O'Reilly, Paul; Gaspar, Helena; Manji, Husseini; Huebel, Christopher; Kelsoe, John R.; Malhotra, Dheeraj; Bertolino, Alessandro; Posthuma, Danielle; Sklar, Pamela; Kapur, Shitij; Sullivan, Patrick F.; Collier, David A.; Edenberg, Howard J.; Department of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology, IU School of MedicineGenome-wide association studies (GWAS) in psychiatry, once they reach sufficient sample size and power, have been enormously successful. The Psychiatric Genomics Consortium (PGC) aims for mega-analyses with sample sizes that will grow to >1 million individuals in the next 5 years. This should lead to hundreds of new findings for common genetic variants across nine psychiatric disorders studied by the PGC. The new targets discovered by GWAS have the potential to restart largely stalled psychiatric drug development pipelines, and the translation of GWAS findings into the clinic is a key aim of the recently funded phase 3 of the PGC. This is not without considerable technical challenges. These approaches complement the other main aim of GWAS studies, risk prediction approaches for improving detection, differential diagnosis, and clinical trial design. This paper outlines the motivations, technical and analytical issues, and the plans for translating PGC phase 3 findings into new therapeutics.