Accurately assessing the risk of schizophrenia conferred by rare copy-number variation affecting genes with brain function.

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2010Citation:
Raychaudhuri S, Korn JM, McCarroll SA, International Schizophrenia Consortium, Altshuler D, Sklar P, Purcell S, Daly MJ, Accurately assessing the risk of schizophrenia conferred by rare copy-number variation affecting genes with brain function., PLoS genetics, 6, 9, e1001097, 2010Download Item:

Abstract:
Investigators have linked rare copy number variation (CNVs) to neuropsychiatric diseases, such as schizophrenia. One
hypothesis is that CNV events cause disease by affecting genes with specific brain functions. Under these circumstances, we
expect that CNV events in cases should impact brain-function genes more frequently than those events in controls. Previous
publications have applied ``pathway?? analyses to genes within neuropsychiatric case CNVs to show enrichment for brainfunctions.
While such analyses have been suggestive, they often have not rigorously compared the rates of CNVs impacting
genes with brain function in cases to controls, and therefore do not address important confounders such as the large size of
brain genes and overall differences in rates and sizes of CNVs. To demonstrate the potential impact of confounders, we
genotyped rare CNV events in 2,415 unaffected controls with Affymetrix 6.0; we then applied standard pathway analyses
using four sets of brain-function genes and observed an apparently highly significant enrichment for each set. The
enrichment is simply driven by the large size of brain-function genes. Instead, we propose a case-control statistical test, cnvenrichment-
test, to compare the rate of CNVs impacting specific gene sets in cases versus controls. With simulations, we
demonstrate that cnv-enrichment-test is robust to case-control differences in CNV size, CNV rate, and systematic differences
in gene size. Finally, we apply cnv-enrichment-test to rare CNV events published by the International Schizophrenia
Consortium (ISC). This approach reveals nominal evidence of case-association in neuronal-activity and the learning gene sets,
but not the other two examined gene sets. The neuronal-activity genes have been associated in a separate set of
schizophrenia cases and controls; however, testing in independent samples is necessary to definitively confirm this
association. Our method is implemented in the PLINK software package.
Author's Homepage:
http://people.tcd.ie/morrisdwhttp://people.tcd.ie/acorvin
http://people.tcd.ie/kennyel
http://people.tcd.ie/mgill
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PUBLISHEDPMID: 20838587
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PLoS genetics6
9, e1001097
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Full text availableKeywords:
Neuroscience, neuronal-activitySubject (TCD):
Genes & Society , NeuroscienceDOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1001097ISSN:
1553-7390Licences: