rs11596214 - SORCS3

Magnitude 2.2 · 5 studies on file

Reported associations

  • Genome-wide association meta-analysis of childhood ADHD symptoms and diagnosis identifies new loci and potential effector genes. - Nature genetics (2025) · van der Laan CM, Ip HF, Schipper M, Hottenga JJ, St Pourcain B, Zayats T, Pool R, Krapohl EML, Brikell I, Soler Artigas M, Cabana-Domínguez J, Llonga N, Nolte IM, Bolhuis K, Palviainen T, Zafarmand H, Gordon S, Aliev F, Burt SA, Wang CA, Saunders G, Karhunen V, Adkins DE, Border R, Peterson RE, Prinz JA, Thiering E, Vilor-Tejedor N, Ahluwalia TS, Allegrini A, Rimfeld K, Chen Q, Lu Y, Martin J, Bosch R, Ramos-Quiroga JA, Neumann A, Ensink J, Grasby KL, Morosoli JJ, Tong X, Marrington S, Scott JG, Shabalin AA, Corley R, Evans LM, Sugden K, Alemany S, Sass L, Vinding R, Ehli EA, Hagenbeek FA, Derks EM, Larsson H, Snieder H, Cecil C, Whipp AM, Korhonen T, Vuoksimaa E, Rose RJ, Uitterlinden AG, Haavik J, Harris JR, Helgeland Ø, Johansson S, Knudsen GPS, Njolstad PR, Lu Q, Rodriguez A, Henders AK, Mamun A, Najman JM, Brown S, Hopfer C, Krauter K, Reynolds CA, Smolen A, Stallings M, Wadsworth S, Wall TL, Eaves L, Silberg JL, Miller A, Havdahl A, Llop S, Lopez-Espinosa MJ, Bønnelykke K, Sunyer J, Arseneault L, Standl M, Heinrich J, Boden J, Pearson J, Horwood J, Kennedy M, Poulton R, Maes HH, Hewitt J, Copeland WE, Middeldorp CM, Williams GM, Wray N, Järvelin MR, McGue M, Iacono W, Caspi A, Moffitt TE, Whitehouse AJO, Pennell CE, Klump KL, Jiang C, Dick DM, Reichborn-Kjennerud T, Martin NG, Medland SE, Vrijkotte T, Kaprio J, Tiemeier H, Davey Smith G, Hartman CA, Oldehinkel AJ, Casas M, Ribasés M, Lichtenstein P, Lundström S, Plomin R, Bartels M, Nivard MG, Boomsma DI · PubMed 40962958

    We performed a genome-wide association meta-analysis (GWAMA) of 290,134 attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) symptom measures of 70,953 unique individuals from multiple raters, ages and instruments (ADHD ). Next, we meta-analyzed the results with a study of ADHD diagnosis (ADHD ). ADHD returned no genome-wide significant variants. We show that the combined ADHD GWAMA identified 39 independent loci, of which 17 were new. Using a recently developed gene-mapping method, Fine-mapped Locus Assessment Model of Effector genes, we identified 22 potential ADHD effector genes implicating several new biological processes and pathways. Moderate negative genetic correlations (r < -0.40) were observed with multiple cognitive traits. In three cohorts, polygenic scores (PGSs) based on ADHD ou

  • Genome-wide analyses of ADHD identify 27 risk loci, refine the genetic architecture and implicate several cognitive domains. - Nature genetics (2023) · Demontis D, Walters GB, Athanasiadis G, Walters R, Therrien K, Nielsen TT, Farajzadeh L, Voloudakis G, Bendl J, Zeng B, Zhang W, Grove J, Als TD, Duan J, Satterstrom FK, Bybjerg-Grauholm J, Bækved-Hansen M, Gudmundsson OO, Magnusson SH, Baldursson G, Davidsdottir K, Haraldsdottir GS, Agerbo E, Hoffman GE, Dalsgaard S, Martin J, Ribasés M, Boomsma DI, Soler Artigas M, Roth Mota N, Howrigan D, Medland SE, Zayats T, Rajagopal VM, Nordentoft M, Mors O, Hougaard DM, Mortensen PB, Daly MJ, Faraone SV, Stefansson H, Roussos P, Franke B, Werge T, Neale BM, Stefansson K, Børglum AD · PubMed 36702997

    Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a prevalent neurodevelopmental disorder with a major genetic component. Here, we present a genome-wide association study meta-analysis of ADHD comprising 38,691 individuals with ADHD and 186,843 controls. We identified 27 genome-wide significant loci, highlighting 76 potential risk genes enriched among genes expressed particularly in early brain development. Overall, ADHD genetic risk was associated with several brain-specific neuronal subtypes and midbrain dopaminergic neurons. In exome-sequencing data from 17,896 individuals, we identified an increased load of rare protein-truncating variants in ADHD for a set of risk genes enriched with probable causal common variants, potentially implicating SORCS3 in ADHD by both common and rare varia

  • Symptom-level modelling unravels the shared genetic architecture of anxiety and depression. - Nature human behaviour (2021) · Thorp JG, Campos AI, Grotzinger AD, Gerring ZF, An J, Ong JS, Wang W, Shringarpure S, Byrne EM, MacGregor S, Martin NG, Medland SE, Middeldorp CM, Derks EM · PubMed 33859377

    Depression and anxiety are highly prevalent and comorbid psychiatric traits that cause considerable burden worldwide. Here we use factor analysis and genomic structural equation modelling to investigate the genetic factor structure underlying 28 items assessing depression, anxiety and neuroticism, a closely related personality trait. Symptoms of depression and anxiety loaded on two distinct, although highly genetically correlated factors, and neuroticism items were partitioned between them. We used this factor structure to conduct genome-wide association analyses on latent factors of depressive symptoms (89 independent variants, 61 genomic loci) and anxiety symptoms (102 variants, 73 loci) in the UK Biobank. Of these associated variants, 72% and 78%, respectively, replicated in an independ

  • Multivariate analysis of 1.5 million people identifies genetic associations with traits related to self-regulation and addiction - Unknown journal (n.d.) · Unknown authors · PubMed 34446935

    ABSTRACT: Behaviors and disorders related to self-regulation, such as substance use, antisocial behavior, and ADHD, are collectively referred to as externalizing and have shared genetic liability. We applied a multivariate approach that leverages genetic correlations among externalizing traits for genome-wide association analyses. By pooling data from ~1.5 million people, our approach is statistically more powerful than single-trait analyses and identifies more than 500 genetic loci. The loci were enriched for genes expressed in the brain and related to nervous system development. A polygenic score constructed from our results predicts a range of behavioral and medical outcomes that were not part of genome-wide analyses, including traits that until now lacked well-performing polygenic scor

  • Genetic contributions to two special factors of neuroticism are associated with affluence, higher intelligence, better health, and longer life - Unknown journal (n.d.) · Unknown authors · PubMed 30867560

    ABSTRACT: Higher scores on the personality trait of neuroticism, the tendency to experience negative emotions, are associated with worse mental and physical health. Studies examining links between neuroticism and health typically operationalize neuroticism by summing the items from a neuroticism scale. However, neuroticism is made up of multiple heterogeneous facets, each contributing to the effect of neuroticism as a whole. A recent study showed that a 12-item neuroticism scale described one broad trait of general neuroticism and two special factors, one characterizing the extent to which people worry and feel vulnerable, and the other characterizing the extent to which people are anxious and tense. This study also found that, although individuals who were higher on general neuroticism li


Auto-generated from study metadata. AI-synthesised commentary is added when this entry is regenerated through content-service's LLM mode.