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Dive into the research topics where Sven Cichon is active.

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Featured researches published by Sven Cichon.


Nature | 2008

Large recurrent microdeletions associated with schizophrenia.

Hreinn Stefansson; Dan Rujescu; Sven Cichon; Olli Pietiläinen; Andres Ingason; Stacy Steinberg; Ragnheidur Fossdal; Engilbert Sigurdsson; T. Sigmundsson; Jacobine E. Buizer-Voskamp; Thomas V O Hansen; Klaus D. Jakobsen; Pierandrea Muglia; Clyde Francks; Paul M. Matthews; Arnaldur Gylfason; Bjarni V. Halldórsson; Daniel F. Gudbjartsson; Thorgeir E. Thorgeirsson; Asgeir Sigurdsson; Adalbjorg Jonasdottir; Aslaug Jonasdottir; Asgeir Björnsson; Sigurborg Mattiasdottir; Thorarinn Blondal; Magnus Haraldsson; Brynja B. Magnusdottir; Ina Giegling; Hans-Jürgen Möller; Annette M. Hartmann

Reduced fecundity, associated with severe mental disorders, places negative selection pressure on risk alleles and may explain, in part, why common variants have not been found that confer risk of disorders such as autism, schizophrenia and mental retardation. Thus, rare variants may account for a larger fraction of the overall genetic risk than previously assumed. In contrast to rare single nucleotide mutations, rare copy number variations (CNVs) can be detected using genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphism arrays. This has led to the identification of CNVs associated with mental retardation and autism. In a genome-wide search for CNVs associating with schizophrenia, we used a population-based sample to identify de novo CNVs by analysing 9,878 transmissions from parents to offspring. The 66 de novo CNVs identified were tested for association in a sample of 1,433 schizophrenia cases and 33,250 controls. Three deletions at 1q21.1, 15q11.2 and 15q13.3 showing nominal association with schizophrenia in the first sample (phase I) were followed up in a second sample of 3,285 cases and 7,951 controls (phase II). All three deletions significantly associate with schizophrenia and related psychoses in the combined sample. The identification of these rare, recurrent risk variants, having occurred independently in multiple founders and being subject to negative selection, is important in itself. CNV analysis may also point the way to the identification of additional and more prevalent risk variants in genes and pathways involved in schizophrenia.


The Lancet | 2013

Identification of risk loci with shared effects on five major psychiatric disorders: a genome-wide analysis

Jordan W. Smoller; Kenneth S. Kendler; Nicholas John Craddock; Phil H. Lee; Benjamin M. Neale; John I. Nurnberger; Stephan Ripke; Susan L. Santangelo; Patrick F. Sullivan; Shaun Purcell; Richard Anney; Jan K. Buitelaar; Ayman H. Fanous; Stephen V. Faraone; Witte J. G. Hoogendijk; Klaus-Peter Lesch; Douglas F. Levinson; Roy H. Perlis; Marcella Rietschel; Brien P. Riley; Edmund Sonuga-Barke; Russell Schachar; Thomas G. Schulze; Anita Thapar; Michael C. Neale; Patrick Bender; Sven Cichon; Mark J. Daly; John R. Kelsoe; Thomas Lehner

BACKGROUND: Findings from family and twin studies suggest that genetic contributions to psychiatric disorders do not in all cases map to present diagnostic categories. We aimed to identify specific variants underlying genetic effects shared between the five disorders in the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium: autism spectrum disorder, attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder, bipolar disorder, major depressive disorder, and schizophrenia. METHODS: We analysed genome-wide single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) data for the five disorders in 33,332 cases and 27,888 controls of European ancestory. To characterise allelic effects on each disorder, we applied a multinomial logistic regression procedure with model selection to identify the best-fitting model of relations between genotype and phenotype. We examined cross-disorder effects of genome-wide significant loci previously identified for bipolar disorder and schizophrenia, and used polygenic risk-score analysis to examine such effects from a broader set of common variants. We undertook pathway analyses to establish the biological associations underlying genetic overlap for the five disorders. We used enrichment analysis of expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL) data to assess whether SNPs with cross-disorder association were enriched for regulatory SNPs in post-mortem brain-tissue samples. FINDINGS: SNPs at four loci surpassed the cutoff for genome-wide significance (p<5x10(-8)) in the primary analysis: regions on chromosomes 3p21 and 10q24, and SNPs within two L-type voltage-gated calcium channel subunits, CACNA1C and CACNB2. Model selection analysis supported effects of these loci for several disorders. Loci previously associated with bipolar disorder or schizophrenia had variable diagnostic specificity. Polygenic risk scores showed cross-disorder associations, notably between adult-onset disorders. Pathway analysis supported a role for calcium channel signalling genes for all five disorders. Finally, SNPs with evidence of cross-disorder association were enriched for brain eQTL markers. INTERPRETATION: Our findings show that specific SNPs are associated with a range of psychiatric disorders of childhood onset or adult onset. In particular, variation in calcium-channel activity genes seems to have pleiotropic effects on psychopathology. These results provide evidence relevant to the goal of moving beyond descriptive syndromes in psychiatry, and towards a nosology informed by disease cause. FUNDING: National Institute of Mental Health.BACKGROUND Findings from family and twin studies suggest that genetic contributions to psychiatric disorders do not in all cases map to present diagnostic categories. We aimed to identify specific variants underlying genetic effects shared between the five disorders in the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium: autism spectrum disorder, attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder, bipolar disorder, major depressive disorder, and schizophrenia. METHODS We analysed genome-wide single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) data for the five disorders in 33,332 cases and 27,888 controls of European ancestory. To characterise allelic effects on each disorder, we applied a multinomial logistic regression procedure with model selection to identify the best-fitting model of relations between genotype and phenotype. We examined cross-disorder effects of genome-wide significant loci previously identified for bipolar disorder and schizophrenia, and used polygenic risk-score analysis to examine such effects from a broader set of common variants. We undertook pathway analyses to establish the biological associations underlying genetic overlap for the five disorders. We used enrichment analysis of expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL) data to assess whether SNPs with cross-disorder association were enriched for regulatory SNPs in post-mortem brain-tissue samples. FINDINGS SNPs at four loci surpassed the cutoff for genome-wide significance (p<5×10(-8)) in the primary analysis: regions on chromosomes 3p21 and 10q24, and SNPs within two L-type voltage-gated calcium channel subunits, CACNA1C and CACNB2. Model selection analysis supported effects of these loci for several disorders. Loci previously associated with bipolar disorder or schizophrenia had variable diagnostic specificity. Polygenic risk scores showed cross-disorder associations, notably between adult-onset disorders. Pathway analysis supported a role for calcium channel signalling genes for all five disorders. Finally, SNPs with evidence of cross-disorder association were enriched for brain eQTL markers. INTERPRETATION Our findings show that specific SNPs are associated with a range of psychiatric disorders of childhood onset or adult onset. In particular, variation in calcium-channel activity genes seems to have pleiotropic effects on psychopathology. These results provide evidence relevant to the goal of moving beyond descriptive syndromes in psychiatry, and towards a nosology informed by disease cause. FUNDING National Institute of Mental Health.


Nature | 2009

Common variants conferring risk of schizophrenia

Hreinn Stefansson; Roel A. Ophoff; Stacy Steinberg; Ole A. Andreassen; Sven Cichon; Dan Rujescu; Thomas Werge; Olli Pietiläinen; Ole Mors; Preben Bo Mortensen; Engilbert Sigurdsson; Omar Gustafsson; Mette Nyegaard; Annamari Tuulio-Henriksson; Andres Ingason; Thomas Hansen; Jaana Suvisaari; Jouko Lönnqvist; Tiina Paunio; Anders D. Børglum; Annette M. Hartmann; Anders Fink-Jensen; Merete Nordentoft; David M. Hougaard; Bent Nørgaard-Pedersen; Yvonne Böttcher; Jes Olesen; René Breuer; Hans-Jürgen Möller; Ina Giegling

Schizophrenia is a complex disorder, caused by both genetic and environmental factors and their interactions. Research on pathogenesis has traditionally focused on neurotransmitter systems in the brain, particularly those involving dopamine. Schizophrenia has been considered a separate disease for over a century, but in the absence of clear biological markers, diagnosis has historically been based on signs and symptoms. A fundamental message emerging from genome-wide association studies of copy number variations (CNVs) associated with the disease is that its genetic basis does not necessarily conform to classical nosological disease boundaries. Certain CNVs confer not only high relative risk of schizophrenia but also of other psychiatric disorders. The structural variations associated with schizophrenia can involve several genes and the phenotypic syndromes, or the ‘genomic disorders’, have not yet been characterized. Single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP)-based genome-wide association studies with the potential to implicate individual genes in complex diseases may reveal underlying biological pathways. Here we combined SNP data from several large genome-wide scans and followed up the most significant association signals. We found significant association with several markers spanning the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) region on chromosome 6p21.3-22.1, a marker located upstream of the neurogranin gene (NRGN) on 11q24.2 and a marker in intron four of transcription factor 4 (TCF4) on 18q21.2. Our findings implicating the MHC region are consistent with an immune component to schizophrenia risk, whereas the association with NRGN and TCF4 points to perturbation of pathways involved in brain development, memory and cognition.


Nature Genetics | 2008

Identification of loci associated with schizophrenia by genome-wide association and follow-up

Michael Conlon O'Donovan; Nicholas John Craddock; Nadine Norton; Hywel Williams; T. Peirce; Valentina Escott-Price; Ivan Nikolov; Marian Lindsay Hamshere; Liam Stuart Carroll; Lyudmila Georgieva; Sarah Dwyer; Peter Holmans; Jonathan Marchini; Chris C. A. Spencer; Bryan Howie; Hin-Tak Leung; Annette M. Hartmann; Hans-Jürgen Möller; Derek W. Morris; Yongyong Shi; Guoyin Feng; Per Hoffmann; Peter Propping; Catalina Vasilescu; Wolfgang Maier; Marcella Rietschel; Stanley Zammit; Johannes Schumacher; Emma M. Quinn; Thomas G. Schulze

We carried out a genome-wide association study of schizophrenia (479 cases, 2,937 controls) and tested loci with P < 10−5 in up to 16,726 additional subjects. Of 12 loci followed up, 3 had strong independent support (P < 5 × 10−4), and the overall pattern of replication was unlikely to occur by chance (P = 9 × 10−8). Meta-analysis provided strongest evidence for association around ZNF804A (P = 1.61 × 10−7) and this strengthened when the affected phenotype included bipolar disorder (P = 9.96 × 10−9).


Molecular Psychiatry | 2008

A genome-wide association study implicates diacylglycerol kinase eta (DGKH) and several other genes in the etiology of bipolar disorder

A. E. Baum; Nirmala Akula; M Cabanero; I Cardona; W Corona; B Klemens; Thomas G. Schulze; Sven Cichon; Marcella Rietschel; Markus M. Nöthen; Alexander Georgi; Johannes Schumacher; Markus Schwarz; R Abou Jamra; Susanne Höfels; Peter Propping; J Satagopan; Sevilla D. Detera-Wadleigh; John Hardy; Francis J. McMahon

The genetic basis of bipolar disorder has long been thought to be complex, with the potential involvement of multiple genes, but methods to analyze populations with respect to this complexity have only recently become available. We have carried out a genome-wide association study of bipolar disorder by genotyping over 550 000 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in two independent case-control samples of European origin. The initial association screen was performed using pooled DNA, and selected SNPs were confirmed by individual genotyping. While DNA pooling reduces power to detect genetic associations, there is a substantial cost saving and gain in efficiency. A total of 88 SNPs, representing 80 different genes, met the prior criteria for replication in both samples. Effect sizes were modest: no single SNP of large effect was detected. Of 37 SNPs selected for individual genotyping, the strongest association signal was detected at a marker within the first intron of diacylglycerol kinase eta (DGKH; P=1.5 × 10−8, experiment-wide P<0.01, OR=1.59). This gene encodes DGKH, a key protein in the lithium-sensitive phosphatidyl inositol pathway. This first genome-wide association study of bipolar disorder shows that several genes, each of modest effect, reproducibly influence disease risk. Bipolar disorder may be a polygenic disease.


Nature Genetics | 2009

Microduplications of 16p11.2 are associated with schizophrenia.

Shane McCarthy; Vladimir Makarov; George Kirov; Anjene Addington; Jon McClellan; Seungtai Yoon; Diana O. Perkins; Diane E. Dickel; Mary Kusenda; Olga Krastoshevsky; Verena Krause; Ravinesh A. Kumar; Detelina Grozeva; Dheeraj Malhotra; Tom Walsh; Elaine H. Zackai; Jaya Ganesh; Ian D. Krantz; Nancy B. Spinner; Patricia Roccanova; Abhishek Bhandari; Kevin Pavon; B. Lakshmi; Anthony Leotta; Jude Kendall; Yoon-ha Lee; Vladimir Vacic; Sydney Gary; Lilia M. Iakoucheva; Timothy J. Crow

Recurrent microdeletions and microduplications of a 600-kb genomic region of chromosome 16p11.2 have been implicated in childhood-onset developmental disorders. We report the association of 16p11.2 microduplications with schizophrenia in two large cohorts. The microduplication was detected in 12/1,906 (0.63%) cases and 1/3,971 (0.03%) controls (P = 1.2 × 10−5, OR = 25.8) from the initial cohort, and in 9/2,645 (0.34%) cases and 1/2,420 (0.04%) controls (P = 0.022, OR = 8.3) of the replication cohort. The 16p11.2 microduplication was associated with a 14.5-fold increased risk of schizophrenia (95% CI (3.3, 62)) in the combined sample. A meta-analysis of datasets for multiple psychiatric disorders showed a significant association of the microduplication with schizophrenia (P = 4.8 × 10−7), bipolar disorder (P = 0.017) and autism (P = 1.9 × 10−7). In contrast, the reciprocal microdeletion was associated only with autism and developmental disorders (P = 2.3 × 10−13). Head circumference was larger in patients with the microdeletion than in patients with the microduplication (P = 0.0007).


Human Molecular Genetics | 2009

Disruption of the neurexin 1 gene is associated with schizophrenia

Dan Rujescu; Andres Ingason; Sven Cichon; Olli Pietiläinen; Michael R. Barnes; Timothea Toulopoulou; Marco Picchioni; Evangelos Vassos; Ulrich Ettinger; Elvira Bramon; Robin M. Murray; Mirella Ruggeri; Sarah Tosato; Chiara Bonetto; Stacy Steinberg; Engilbert Sigurdsson; T. Sigmundsson; Hannes Petursson; Arnaldur Gylfason; Pall Olason; Gudmundur Hardarsson; Gudrun A Jonsdottir; Omar Gustafsson; Ragnheidur Fossdal; Ina Giegling; Hans-Jürgen Möller; Annette M. Hartmann; Per Hoffmann; Caroline Crombie; Gillian M. Fraser

Deletions within the neurexin 1 gene (NRXN1; 2p16.3) are associated with autism and have also been reported in two families with schizophrenia. We examined NRXN1, and the closely related NRXN2 and NRXN3 genes, for copy number variants (CNVs) in 2977 schizophrenia patients and 33 746 controls from seven European populations (Iceland, Finland, Norway, Germany, The Netherlands, Italy and UK) using microarray data. We found 66 deletions and 5 duplications in NRXN1, including a de novo deletion: 12 deletions and 2 duplications occurred in schizophrenia cases (0.47%) compared to 49 and 3 (0.15%) in controls. There was no common breakpoint and the CNVs varied from 18 to 420 kb. No CNVs were found in NRXN2 or NRXN3. We performed a Cochran-Mantel-Haenszel exact test to estimate association between all CNVs and schizophrenia (P = 0.13; OR = 1.73; 95% CI 0.81-3.50). Because the penetrance of NRXN1 CNVs may vary according to the level of functional impact on the gene, we next restricted the association analysis to CNVs that disrupt exons (0.24% of cases and 0.015% of controls). These were significantly associated with a high odds ratio (P = 0.0027; OR 8.97, 95% CI 1.8-51.9). We conclude that NRXN1 deletions affecting exons confer risk of schizophrenia.


Science | 2009

Neural Mechanisms of a Genome-Wide Supported Psychosis Variant

Christine Esslinger; Henrik Walter; Peter Kirsch; Susanne Erk; Knut Schnell; Claudia Arnold; Leila Haddad; Daniela Mier; Carola Opitz von Boberfeld; Kyeon Raab; Stephanie H. Witt; Marcella Rietschel; Sven Cichon; Andreas Meyer-Lindenberg

A genetic polymorphism associated with schizophrenia conveys a risk for abnormal connectivity between brain regions. Schizophrenia is a devastating, highly heritable brain disorder of unknown etiology. Recently, the first common genetic variant associated on a genome-wide level with schizophrenia and possibly bipolar disorder was discovered in ZNF804A (rs1344706). We show, by using an imaging genetics approach, that healthy carriers of rs1344706 risk genotypes exhibit no changes in regional activity but pronounced gene dosage–dependent alterations in functional coupling (correlated activity) of dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) across hemispheres and with hippocampus, mirroring findings in patients, and abnormal coupling of amygdala. Our findings establish disturbed connectivity as a neurogenetic risk mechanism for psychosis supported by genome-wide association, show that rs1344706 or variation in linkage disequilibrium is functional in human brain, and validate the intermediate phenotype strategy in psychiatry.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2009

Genome-wide association for major depressive disorder: a possible role for the presynaptic protein piccolo

Patrick F. Sullivan; E.J.C. de Geus; Gonneke Willemsen; Michael R. James; J.H. Smit; T. Zandbelt; V. Arolt; Bernhard T. Baune; D. H. R. Blackwood; Sven Cichon; William L. Coventry; Katharina Domschke; Anne Farmer; Maurizio Fava; S. D. Gordon; Q. He; A. C. Heath; Peter Heutink; Florian Holsboer; Witte J. G. Hoogendijk; J.J. Hottenga; Yi Hu; Martin A. Kohli; D. Y. Lin; Susanne Lucae; Donald J. MacIntyre; W. Maier; K. A. McGhee; Peter McGuffin; G. W. Montgomery

Major depressive disorder (MDD) is a common complex trait with enormous public health significance. As part of the Genetic Association Information Network initiative of the US Foundation for the National Institutes of Health, we conducted a genome-wide association study of 435 291 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) genotyped in 1738 MDD cases and 1802 controls selected to be at low liability for MDD. Of the top 200, 11 signals localized to a 167 kb region overlapping the gene piccolo (PCLO, whose protein product localizes to the cytomatrix of the presynaptic active zone and is important in monoaminergic neurotransmission in the brain) with P-values of 7.7 × 10−7 for rs2715148 and 1.2 × 10−6 for rs2522833. We undertook replication of SNPs in this region in five independent samples (6079 MDD independent cases and 5893 controls) but no SNP exceeded the replication significance threshold when all replication samples were analyzed together. However, there was heterogeneity in the replication samples, and secondary analysis of the original sample with the sample of greatest similarity yielded P=6.4 × 10−8 for the nonsynonymous SNP rs2522833 that gives rise to a serine to alanine substitution near a C2 calcium-binding domain of the PCLO protein. With the integrated replication effort, we present a specific hypothesis for further studies.


PLOS Genetics | 2010

Multiple Independent Loci at Chromosome 15q25.1 Affect Smoking Quantity: a Meta-Analysis and Comparison with Lung Cancer and COPD

Nancy L. Saccone; Robert Culverhouse; Tae-Hwi Schwantes-An; Dale S. Cannon; Xiangning Chen; Sven Cichon; Ina Giegling; Shizhong Han; Younghun Han; Kaisu Keskitalo-Vuokko; Xiangyang Kong; Maria Teresa Landi; Jennie Z. Ma; Susan E. Short; Sarah H. Stephens; Victoria L. Stevens; Lingwei Sun; Yufei Wang; Angela S. Wenzlaff; Steven H. Aggen; Naomi Breslau; Peter Broderick; Nilanjan Chatterjee; Jingchun Chen; Andrew C. Heath; Markku Heliövaara; Nicole R. Hoft; David J. Hunter; Majken K. Jensen; Nicholas G. Martin

Recently, genetic association findings for nicotine dependence, smoking behavior, and smoking-related diseases converged to implicate the chromosome 15q25.1 region, which includes the CHRNA5-CHRNA3-CHRNB4 cholinergic nicotinic receptor subunit genes. In particular, association with the nonsynonymous CHRNA5 SNP rs16969968 and correlates has been replicated in several independent studies. Extensive genotyping of this region has suggested additional statistically distinct signals for nicotine dependence, tagged by rs578776 and rs588765. One goal of the Consortium for the Genetic Analysis of Smoking Phenotypes (CGASP) is to elucidate the associations among these markers and dichotomous smoking quantity (heavy versus light smoking), lung cancer, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). We performed a meta-analysis across 34 datasets of European-ancestry subjects, including 38,617 smokers who were assessed for cigarettes-per-day, 7,700 lung cancer cases and 5,914 lung-cancer-free controls (all smokers), and 2,614 COPD cases and 3,568 COPD-free controls (all smokers). We demonstrate statistically independent associations of rs16969968 and rs588765 with smoking (mutually adjusted p-values<10−35 and <10−8 respectively). Because the risk alleles at these loci are negatively correlated, their association with smoking is stronger in the joint model than when each SNP is analyzed alone. Rs578776 also demonstrates association with smoking after adjustment for rs16969968 (p<10−6). In models adjusting for cigarettes-per-day, we confirm the association between rs16969968 and lung cancer (p<10−20) and observe a nominally significant association with COPD (p = 0.01); the other loci are not significantly associated with either lung cancer or COPD after adjusting for rs16969968. This study provides strong evidence that multiple statistically distinct loci in this region affect smoking behavior. This study is also the first report of association between rs588765 (and correlates) and smoking that achieves genome-wide significance; these SNPs have previously been associated with mRNA levels of CHRNA5 in brain and lung tissue.

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Wolfgang Maier

German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases

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