E G Jones's research while affiliated with University of California, Davis and other places

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Publications (229)


Figure 1: Genetic pleiotropy enrichment of schizophrenia (SCZ) conditional on MS. (a) Conditional Q-Q plot of nominal versus empirical −log10 P-values (corrected for inflation) in SCZ below the standard GWAS threshold of P<5 × 10−8 as a function of significance of association with multiple sclerosis (MS) at the level of −log10(P)0, −log10(P)1, −log10(P)2, −log10(P)3 corresponding to P1, P0.1, P0.01, P0.001, respectively. Dotted lines indicate the null hypothesis. (b) Conditional true discovery rate (TDR) plots illustrating the increase in TDR associated with increased pleiotropic enrichment in SCZ conditioned on MS (SCZ|MS). (c) Cumulative replication plot showing the average rate of replication (P<0.05) within SCZ substudies for a given P-value threshold shows that pleiotropic enriched SNP categories replicate at a higher rate in independent SCZ samples, for SCZ conditioned on MS (SCZ|MS). The vertical intercept is the overall replication rate per category. (d) Z-score-z-score plot demonstrates that the empirical replication z-scores closely match the expected a posteriori effect sizes of SCZ and are strongly dependent upon pleiotropy with MS. Analysis is based on split half method of the 17 PGC SCZ substudies.Download Power Point slide (346 KB)
Table 1 . Conditional FDRo0.05, non MHC SNPs associated with schizophrenia given multiple sclerosis
Figure 2: Genetic pleiotropy enrichment of BD conditional on MS. (a) Conditional Q-Q plot of nominal versus empirical −log10 P-values (corrected for inflation) in bipolar disorder (BD) below the standard GWAS threshold of P<5 × 10−8 as a function of significance of association with multiple sclerosis (MS) at the level of −log10(P)0, −log10(P)1, −log10(P)2, −log10(P)3 corresponding to P1, P0.1, P0.01, P0.001, respectively. Dotted lines indicate the null hypothesis. (b) Conditional true discovery rate (TDR) plots illustrating the increase in TDR associated with increased pleiotropic enrichment in BD conditioned on MS (BD|MS).Download Power Point slide (218 KB)
Figure 3: Conditional FDR Manhattan plot’. Conditional FDR Manhattan plot of conditional –log10 (FDR) values for schizophrenia (SCZ) alone (gray) and SCZ conditioned on multiple sclerosis (MS; SCZ|MS, red). SNPs with conditional –log10 FDR>1.3 (that is, FDR<0.05) are shown with large points. A black line around the large points indicates the most significant SNP in each LD block. This SNP is annotated with the closest gene. Genes are listed in increasing order in terms of SNPs genomic position within each chromosome from left to right and novel ones are marked by stars (*). The figure shows the localization of the 21 independent loci on a total of 13 chromosomes.Download Power Point slide (354 KB)
Genetic pleiotropy between multiple sclerosis and schizophrenia but not bipolar disorder: differential involvement of immune-related gene loci
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February 2015

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1,490 Reads

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188 Citations

Molecular Psychiatry

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Frauke Zipp

Converging evidence implicates immune abnormalities in schizophrenia (SCZ), and recent genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified immune-related single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with SCZ. Using the conditional false discovery rate (FDR) approach, we evaluated pleiotropy in SNPs associated with SCZ (n=21 856) and multiple sclerosis (MS) (n=43 879), an inflammatory, demyelinating disease of the central nervous system. Because SCZ and bipolar disorder (BD) show substantial clinical and genetic overlap, we also investigated pleiotropy between BD (n=16 731) and MS. We found significant genetic overlap between SCZ and MS and identified 21 independent loci associated with SCZ, conditioned on association with MS. This enrichment was driven by the major histocompatibility complex (MHC). Importantly, we detected the involvement of the same human leukocyte antigen (HLA) alleles in both SCZ and MS, but with an opposite directionality of effect of associated HLA alleles (that is, MS risk alleles were associated with decreased SCZ risk). In contrast, we found no genetic overlap between BD and MS. Considered together, our findings demonstrate genetic pleiotropy between SCZ and MS and suggest that the MHC signals may differentiate SCZ from BD susceptibility.

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Psychiatric genome-wide association study analyses implicate neuronal, immune and histone pathways

January 2015

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428 Reads

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105 Citations

Nature Neuroscience

Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of psychiatric disorders have identified multiple genetic associations with such disorders, but better methods are needed to derive the underlying biological mechanisms that these signals indicate. We sought to identify biological pathways in GWAS data from over 60,000 participants from the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium. We developed an analysis framework to rank pathways that requires only summary statistics. We combined this score across disorders to find common pathways across three adult psychiatric disorders: schizophrenia, major depression and bipolar disorder. Histone methylation processes showed the strongest association, and we also found statistically significant evidence for associations with multiple immune and neuronal signaling pathways and with the postsynaptic density. Our study indicates that risk variants for psychiatric disorders aggregate in particular biological pathways and that these pathways are frequently shared between disorders. Our results confirm known mechanisms and suggest several novel insights into the etiology of psychiatric disorders.


Cross-Disorder Group of the Psychiatric Genomics C, Genetic Risk Outcome of Psychosis C. Identification of risk loci with shared effects on five major psychiatric disorders: a genome-wide analysis. Lancet 381: 1371-1379

April 2013

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2,056 Reads

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2,098 Citations

The Lancet

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.


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

January 2013

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904 Reads

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1,235 Citations

The Lancet

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 specifi c variants underlying genetic eff ects shared between the fi ve disorders in the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium: autism spectrum disorder, attention defi cit-hyperactivity disorder, bipolar disorder, major depressive disorder, and schizophrenia.


Cajal's Degeneration and Regeneration of the Nervous System

January 2012

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982 Reads

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307 Citations

This book is a reprint of an English translation of Cajal's original work, with abundant notes and commentaries by the editor. Cajal's fundamental contributions to neuroscience continue to be important today and this account accurately details his ideas and data. The book also provides readers with the opportunity to learn what Cajal thought about his research career and the significance of his observations. Excerpts from Tello's memorial lectures also provide a contemporary view of Cajal's work.


Large-scale genome-wide association analysis of bipolar disorder identifies a new susceptibility locus near ODZ4

January 2011

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37 Reads

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110 Citations

We conducted a combined genome-wide association study (GWAS) of 7,481 individuals with bipolar disorder (cases) and 9,250 controls as part of the Psychiatric GWAS Consortium. Our replication study tested 34 SNPs in 4,496 independent cases with bipolar disorder and 42,422 independent controls and found that 18 of 34 SNPs had P < 0.05, with 31 of 34 SNPs having signals with the same direction of effect (P = 3.8 × 10(-7)). An analysis of all 11,974 bipolar disorder cases and 51,792 controls confirmed genome-wide significant evidence of association for CACNA1C and identified a new intronic variant in ODZ4. We identified a pathway comprised of subunits of calcium channels enriched in bipolar disorder association intervals. Finally, a combined GWAS analysis of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder yielded strong association evidence for SNPs in CACNA1C and in the region of NEK4-ITIH1-ITIH3-ITIH4. Our replication results imply that increasing sample sizes in bipolar disorder will confirm many additional loci.


Figure 1 Results are shown as-log 10 P for genotyped and imputed SNPs. The most associated SNP in the primary analysis is shown as a small purple triangle. The most associated SNP in the combined analysis is shown as a large purple triangle. The colors of the remaining markers reflects r 2 values with the most associated SNP. The recombination rate from CEU HapMap data (second y axis) is shown in light blue.
table 2 Primary GWAs association results for four most significant regions
table 3 Association results for the primary GWAs, replication and combined samples
Large-scale genome-wide association analysis of bipolar disorder identifies a new susceptibility locus near ODZ4

January 2011

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343 Reads

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226 Citations

Nature Genetics

We conducted a combined genome-wide association study (GWAS) of 7,481 individuals with bipolar disorder (cases) and 9,250 controls as part of the Psychiatric GWAS Consortium. Our replication study tested 34 SNPs in 4,496 independent cases with bipolar disorder and 42,422 independent controls and found that 18 of 34 SNPs had P < 0.05, with 31 of 34 SNPs having signals with the same direction of effect (P = 3.8 x 10(-7)). An analysis of all 11,974 bipolar disorder cases and 51,792 controls confirmed genome-wide significant evidence of association for CACNA1C and identified a new intronic variant in ODZ4. We identified a pathway comprised of subunits of calcium channels enriched in bipolar disorder association intervals. Finally, a combined GWAS analysis of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder yielded strong association evidence for SNPs in CACNA1C and in the region of NEK4-ITIH1-ITIH3-ITIH4. Our replication results imply that increasing sample sizes in bipolar disorder will confirm many additional loci.




Citations (83)


... According to this study, an expression of CAMKIIα (alpha subunit of type II calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase) mRNA was very high in the ATN, especially in the AV and AM. CAMKIIα is a highly expressed kinase in the central nervous system, but it is only present in excitatory cells and not in GABAergic cells in the thalamus [40, 99,100]. Of the NMDA receptors subunits, NR1 mRNA expression was high in all the nuclei, while of non-NMDA receptor subunits, GluR2 mRNA demonstrated the highest level of expression. ...

Reference:

Neurochemistry of the Anterior Thalamic Nuclei
Cell-specific expression of type II calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase isoforms and glutamate receptors in normal and visually deprived lateral geniculate nucleus of monkeys
  • Citing Article
  • January 1998

The Journal of Comparative Neurology

... A strong association has been found between specific rare but recurrent chromosomal CNVs and psychiatric disorders, including schizophrenia, autism spectrum disorder, and mood and anxiety disorders [108]. Microarray experiments have now revealed abundant copy-number variations, a type of genetic variations in which stretches of DNA are duplicated or deleted [109,110]. ...

Identifying genes associated with bipolar disorder in the NIMII genetic study intiative samples
  • Citing Conference Paper
  • July 2008

The International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology

... Based on tremendous and elaborate work by Ramón y Cajal and other neuroanatomists around the beginning of 20th Century, it was generally believed that "once the development was ended, the fonts of growth and regeneration. . . dried up irrevocably (Cajal, 1991)." Pioneering studies by Joseph Altman in the 1960s, which unequivocally showed the generation of new neurons in the hippocampal dentate gyrus of adult mammals by [3H]thymidine autoradiography (Altman, 1969), were, therefore, underappreciated, and adult neurogenesis remained a controversial field for more than a decade. ...

Cajal's Degeneration and Regeneration of the Nervous System
  • Citing Book
  • January 2012

... DPYD is implicated in pyrimidine metabolism and contains a binding site for the micro-RNA miR-137, which has been found associated to Schizophrenia [50]. PKP4 is involved in the regulation of cell adhesion and cytoskeletal modifications, which have been substantially implicated in cell junction deficits associated to MDD [51]. Previously, Lubke et al. have described a specifical association of BPD with the serine incorporator 5 gene (SERINC5), which seems to have a peculiar role in myelination, and has been involved in the development of psychiatric disorders characterized by lack of social interactions [52,53]. ...

Psychiatric genome-wide association study analyses implicate neuronal, immune and histone pathways

Nature Neuroscience

... The existence of GABA-ergic cells in V1 has been extensively described in primates (Peters 1994;Jones et al. 1994;Morrison et al. 1998;Ulfig 2002), and is part of the visual area circuitry both for parallel processing and signal enhancement. GABA-ergic neurons are in large majority interneurons (DeFelipe et al. 2013), which are critical for signal modulation throughout sensitive pathways, naturally including the cortex (Fino et al. 2013). ...

GABA Neurons and Their Role in Activity-Dependent Plasticity of Adult Primate Visual Cortex

... Besides, borderline/barrier-associated macrophages also constitute an important cellular sentinel in the normal adult brain [15]. Their overactivation can enhance synaptic pruning, prevent angiogenesis and neurogenesis, and induce neuronal and myelinic loss [16][17][18]. Nevertheless, immune cells, especially microglia, are also beneficial for brain homeostasis with neuro-protective functions and may contribute to stress adaptation, as demonstrated by others and us in mice [19,20]. ...

Psychiatric genome-wide association study analyses implicate neuronal, immune and histone pathways. Network and Pathway Analysis Subgroup of Psychiatric Genomics Consortium.
  • Citing Article
  • February 2015

Nature Neuroscience

... This included differential expression of 25 miRNAs, although 5 were not statistically significant after correction for multiple testing following treatment with the viral mimic poly I:C alone, the synthetic cannabinoid HU210 alone, or a combination of them [64]. More strikingly, a recent study by Baulina et al. [63] reported up-regulation of 26 miRNAs from this region in the PBMCs of eight treatment-naive male patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) compared to four healthy controls, but not in a female cohort of the same size [65], which is an interesting observation considering the shared genetic risk between schizophrenia and MS [66] and also the higher rate of psychiatric disorders among MS patients in comparison to the general population [67][68][69]. ...

Genetic pleiotropy between multiple sclerosis and schizophrenia but not bipolar disorder: differential involvement of immune-related gene loci

Molecular Psychiatry

... Three influential papers reported cytoarchitectonic findings suggestive of altered neuronal migration during fetal life. [78][79][80][81][82] Unfortunately, none of these initial reports has been fully replicated. [83][84][85][86][87] The other histopathological evidence frequently cited in support of a fetal origin of schizophrenia is the absence of gliosis in postmortem schizophrenic brain. ...

Developmental abnormalities of the prefrontal cortex in schizophrenia
  • Citing Article
  • April 1996

Biological Psychiatry

... GABAergic neurons are more sensitive to effects of MeHg than are glutamatergic neurons in hippocampal (Yuan and Atchison, 1995;1997) and cerebellar slices . In the latter, granule cell GABA A receptor-mediated spontaneous inhibitory postsynaptic currents (sIPSCs) are additionally more sensitive to MeHg-induced block than are those of Purkinje cells . ...

Area and lamina-specific expression of GABA A receptor subunit mRNAs in monkey cerebral cortex
  • Citing Article
  • May 1997

Canadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology

... Developmental studies have reported that some subunits of GABA A receptors like α2 and α3 are predominantly expressed during in-utero development, and then substituted for α1 around birth in the rat hippocampus (Brooks-Kayal et al., 2001;Fritschy et al., 1994;Golshani et al., 1997;Kapur and Macdonald, 1999;Ramos et al., 2004;Temple and Wray, 2005). Lopez-Telleza et al. and Davis et al. stated that GABA Aα1 receptor expression is low at birth and increases during the developmental period. ...

Developmental expression of GABAA receptor subunit and GAD genes in mouse somatosensory barrel cortex
  • Citing Article
  • June 1997

The Journal of Comparative Neurology