Abstract

Most genetic studies assume that the function of a genetic variant is independent of the parent from which it is inherited, but this is not always true. The best known example of parent-of-origin effects arises with respect to alleles at imprinted loci. In classical imprinting, characteristically, either the maternal or paternal copy is expressed, but not both. Only alleles present in one of the parental copies of the gene, the expressed copy, is likely to contribute to disease. It has been postulated that imprinting is important in central nervous system development, and that consequently, imprinted loci may be involved in schizophrenia. If this is true, allowing for parent-of-origin effects might be important in genetic studies of schizophrenia. Here, we use genome-wide association data from one of the world’s largest samples (N = 695) of parent schizophrenia-offspring trios to test for parent-of-origin effects. To maximise power, we restricted our analyses to test two main hypotheses. If imprinting plays a disproportionate role in schizophrenia susceptibility, we postulated a) that alleles showing robust evidence for association to schizophrenia from previous genome-wide association studies should be enriched for parent-of-origin effects and b) that genes at loci imprinted in humans or mice should be enriched both for genome-wide significant associations, and in our sample, for parent-of-origin effects. Neither prediction was supported in the present study. We have shown, that it is unlikely that parent-of-origin effects or imprinting play particularly important roles in schizophrenia, although our findings do not exclude such effects at specific loci nor do they exclude such effects among rare alleles.

Highlights

  • Schizophrenia is highly heritable disorder [1, 2] for which there is evidence for a substantial neurodevelopmental component [3,4,5]

  • We have tested the hypothesis that imprinted genes are disproportionately enriched for common alleles that confer susceptibility to schizophrenia

  • If the hypothesis is true, we first predicted that common alleles that are associated with schizophrenia would show evidence for parent-of-origin biased transmission

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Summary

Introduction

Schizophrenia is highly heritable disorder [1, 2] for which there is evidence for a substantial neurodevelopmental component [3,4,5]. Risk of schizophrenia is conferred by a large number of genetic factors; genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified over 100 schizophrenia-associated common variant loci [6] as well as 11 robustly associated rare chromosomal. No Enrichment in Schizophrenia for Associations at Imprinted Loci

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