Exome sequencing in families with severe mental illness identifies novel and rare variants in genes implicated in Mendelian neuropsychiatric syndromes

Author:

Ganesh Suhas,Husayn Ahmed P,Nadella Ravi Kumar,More Ravi Prabhakar,Sheshadri Manasa,Viswanath Biju,Rao Mahendra,Jain Sanjeev,Mukherjee Odity,

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionSevere Mental Illnesses (SMI), such as bipolar disorder and schizophrenia, are highly heritable, and have a complex pattern of inheritance. Genome wide association studies detect a part of the heritability, which can be attributed to common genetic variation. Examination of rare variants with Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) may add to the understanding of genetic architecture of SMIs.MethodsWe analyzed 32 ill subjects (with diagnosis of Bipolar Disorder, n=26; schizophrenia, n=4; schizoaffective disorder, n=1 schizophrenia like psychosis, n=1) from 8 multiplex families; and 33 healthy individuals by whole exome sequencing. Prioritized variants were selected by a 4-step filtering process, which included deleteriousness by 5 in silico algorithms; sharing within families, absence in the controls and rarity in South Asian sample of Exome Aggregation Consortium.ResultsWe identified a total of 42 unique rare, non-synonymous deleterious variants in this study with an average of 5 variants per family. None of the variants were shared across families, indicating a ‘private’ mutational profile. Twenty (47.6%) of the variant harboring genes identified in this sample have been previously reported to contribute to the risk of neuropsychiatric syndromes. These include genes which are related to neurodevelopmental processes, or have been implicated in different monogenic syndromes with a severe neurodevelopmental phenotype.ConclusionNGS approaches in family based studies are useful to identify novel and rare variants in genes for complex disorders like SMI. The study further validates the phenotypic burden of rare variants in Mendelian disease genes, indicating pleiotropic effects in the etiology of severe mental illnesses.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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