Howard Edenberg

Howard Edenberg

Indiana University Bloomington

H-index: 114

North America-United States

About Howard Edenberg

Howard Edenberg, With an exceptional h-index of 114 and a recent h-index of 55 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at Indiana University Bloomington, specializes in the field of Genetics and Genomics of common disorders.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

Polygenic Risk for Alcohol Use Disorder Affects Cellular Responses to Ethanol Exposure in a Human Microglial Cell Model

A phenome-wide association and Mendelian randomisation study of alcohol use variants in a diverse cohort comprising over 3 million individuals

Cross-ancestry genetic investigation of schizophrenia, cannabis use disorder, and tobacco smoking

A polygenic resilience score moderates the genetic risk for schizophrenia: Replication in 18,090 cases and 28,114 controls from the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium

Examining associations between genetic and neural risk for externalizing behaviors in adolescence and early adulthood

Fine-mapping genomic loci refines bipolar disorder risk genes

Upregulated GIRK2 counteracts ethanol-induced changes in excitability & respiration in human neurons

What Risks Do Offspring of Parents With Alcohol Use Disorder Face?

Howard Edenberg Information

University

Indiana University Bloomington

Position

Distinguished Professor School of Medicine

Citations(all)

51396

Citations(since 2020)

18306

Cited By

39342

hIndex(all)

114

hIndex(since 2020)

55

i10Index(all)

427

i10Index(since 2020)

262

Email

University Profile Page

Indiana University Bloomington

Howard Edenberg Skills & Research Interests

Genetics and Genomics of common disorders

Top articles of Howard Edenberg

Polygenic Risk for Alcohol Use Disorder Affects Cellular Responses to Ethanol Exposure in a Human Microglial Cell Model

Authors

Xindi Li,Jiayi Liu,Andrew Boreland,Sneha Kapadia,Siwei Zhang,Alessandro Stillitano,Yara Abbo,Lorraine Clark,Dongbing Lai,Yunlong Li,Peter Barr,Jacquelyn Meyers,chella Kamarajan,Weipeng Kuang,Arpana Agrawal,Paul Slesinger,Danielle Dick,Jessica Salvatore,Jay Tischfield,Jubao Duan,Howard Edenberg,Anat Kreimer,Ronald P Hart,Zhiping P Pang

Journal

bioRxiv

Published Date

2024

Polygenic risk scores (PRS) assess genetic susceptibility to Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD), yet their molecular implications remain underexplored. Neuroimmune interactions, particularly in microglia, are recognized as significant contributors to AUD pathophysiology. We investigated the interplay between AUD PRS and ethanol in human microglia derived from iPSCs from individuals with high- or low-PRS (HPRS or LPRS) of AUD. Ethanol exposure induced elevated CD68 expression and morphological changes in microglia, with differential responses between HPRS and LPRS microglial cells. Transcriptomic analysis revealed expression differences in MHCII complex and phagocytosis-related genes following ethanol exposure; HPRS microglial cells displayed enhanced phagocytosis and increased CLEC7A expression, unlike LPRS microglial cells. Synapse numbers in co-cultures of induced neurons with microglia after alcohol exposure were lower in HRPS co-cultures, suggesting possible excess synapse pruning. This study provides insights into the intricate relationship between AUD PRS, ethanol, and microglial function, potentially influencing neuronal functions in developing AUD.

A phenome-wide association and Mendelian randomisation study of alcohol use variants in a diverse cohort comprising over 3 million individuals

Authors

Xueyi Shen,David M Howard,Mark J Adams,W David Hill,Toni-Kim Clarke,Ian J Deary,Heather C Whalley,Andrew M McIntosh

Journal

Nature communications

Published Date

2020/5/8

Depression is a leading cause of worldwide disability but there remains considerable uncertainty regarding its neural and behavioural associations. Here, using non-overlapping Psychiatric Genomics Consortium (PGC) datasets as a reference, we estimate polygenic risk scores for depression (depression-PRS) in a discovery (N = 10,674) and replication (N = 11,214) imaging sample from UK Biobank. We report 77 traits that are significantly associated with depression-PRS, in both discovery and replication analyses. Mendelian Randomisation analysis supports a potential causal effect of liability to depression on brain white matter microstructure (β: 0.125 to 0.868, pFDR < 0.043). Several behavioural traits are also associated with depression-PRS (β: 0.014 to 0.180, pFDR: 0.049 to 1.28 × 10−14) and we find a significant and positive interaction between depression-PRS and adverse environmental …

Cross-ancestry genetic investigation of schizophrenia, cannabis use disorder, and tobacco smoking

Authors

Emma C Johnson,Isabelle Austin-Zimmerman,Hayley HA Thorpe,Daniel F Levey,David AA Baranger,Sarah Mary Carlton Colbert,Ditte Demontis,Jibran Y Khokhar,Lea K Davis,Howard J Edenberg,Marta Di Forti,Sandra Sanchez-Roige,Joel Gelernter,Arpana Agrawal

Journal

MedRxiv

Published Date

2024

Individuals with schizophrenia frequently experience co-occurring substance use, including tobacco smoking and heavy cannabis use, and substance use disorders. There is interest in understanding the extent to which these relationships are causal, and to what extent shared genetic factors play a role. We explored the relationships between schizophrenia (Scz), cannabis use disorder (CanUD), and ever-regular tobacco smoking (Smk) using the largest available genome-wide studies of these phenotypes in individuals of African and European ancestries. All three phenotypes were positively genetically correlated (rgs = 0.17 - 0.62). Causal inference analyses suggested the presence of horizontal pleiotropy, but evidence for bidirectional causal relationships was also found between all three phenotypes even after correcting for horizontal pleiotropy. We identified 439 pleiotropic loci in the European ancestry data, 150 of which were novel (i.e., not genome-wide significant in the original studies). Of these pleiotropic loci, 202 had lead variants which showed convergent effects (i.e., same direction of effect) on Scz, CanUD, and Smk. Genetic variants convergent across all three phenotypes showed strong genetic correlations with risk-taking, executive function, and several mental health conditions. Our results suggest that both horizontal pleiotropy and causal mechanisms may play a role in the relationship between CanUD, Smk, and Scz, but longitudinal, prospective studies are needed to confirm a causal relationship.

A polygenic resilience score moderates the genetic risk for schizophrenia: Replication in 18,090 cases and 28,114 controls from the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium

Authors

Jonathan L Hess,Manuel Mattheisen,Schizophrenia Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium,Tiffany A Greenwood,Ming T Tsuang,Howard J Edenberg,Peter Holmans,Stephen V Faraone,Stephen J Glatt

Journal

American Journal of Medical Genetics Part B: Neuropsychiatric Genetics

Published Date

2024/3

Identifying heritable factors that moderate the genetic risk for schizophrenia (SCZ) could help clarify why some individuals remain unaffected despite having relatively high genetic liability. Previously, we developed a framework to mine genome‐wide association (GWAS) data for common genetic variants that protect high‐risk unaffected individuals from SCZ, leading to derivation of the first‐ever “polygenic resilience score” for SCZ (resilient controls n = 3786; polygenic risk score‐matched SCZ cases n = 18,619). Here, we performed a replication study to verify the moderating effect of our polygenic resilience score on SCZ risk (OR = 1.09, p = 4.03 × 10−5) using newly released GWAS data from 23 independent case–control studies collated by the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium (PGC) (resilient controls n = 2821; polygenic risk score‐matched SCZ cases n = 5150). Additionally, we sought to optimize …

Examining associations between genetic and neural risk for externalizing behaviors in adolescence and early adulthood

Authors

Sarah J Brislin,Jessica E Salvatore,Jacquelyn M Meyers,Chella Kamarajan,Martin H Plawecki,Howard J Edenberg,Samuel Kuperman,Jay Tischfield,Victor Hesselbrock,Andrey P Anokhin,David B Chorlian,Marc A Schuckit,John I Nurnberger,Lance Bauer,Gayathri Pandey,Ashwini K Pandey,John R Kramer,Grace Chan,Bernice Porjesz,Danielle M Dick,COGA Collaborators

Journal

Psychological medicine

Published Date

2024/1

BackgroundResearchers have identified genetic and neural risk factors for externalizing behaviors. However, it has not yet been determined if genetic liability is conferred in part through associations with more proximal neurophysiological risk markers.MethodsParticipants from the Collaborative Study on the Genetics of Alcoholism, a large, family-based study of alcohol use disorders were genotyped and polygenic scores for externalizing (EXT PGS) were calculated. Associations with target P3 amplitude from a visual oddball task (P3) and broad endorsement of externalizing behaviors (indexed via self-report of alcohol and cannabis use, and antisocial behavior) were assessed in participants of European (EA; N = 2851) and African ancestry (AA; N = 1402). Analyses were also stratified by age (adolescents, age 12–17 and young adults, age 18–32).ResultsThe EXT PGS was significantly associated with higher …

Fine-mapping genomic loci refines bipolar disorder risk genes

Authors

Maria Koromina,Ashvin Ravi,Georgia Panagiotaropoulou,Brian M Schilder,Jack Humphrey,Alice Braun,Tim Bidgeli,Chris Chatzinakos,Brandon Coombes,Jaeyoung Kim,Xiaoxi Liu,Chikashi Terao,Kevin S O'Connell,Mark Adams,Rolf Adolfsson,Martin Alda,Lars Alfredsson,Till FM Andlauer,Ole A Andreassen,Anastasia Antoniou,Bernhard T Baune,Susanne Bengesser,Joanna Biernacka,Michael Boehnke,Rosa Bosch,Murray Cairns,Vaughan J Carr,Miquel Casas,Stanley Catts,Sven Cichon,Aiden Corvin,Nicholas Craddock,Konstantinos Dafnas,Nina Dalkner,Udo Dannlowski,Franziska Degenhardt,Arianna Di Florio,Dimitris Dikeos,Frederike Tabea Fellendorf,Panagiotis Ferentinos,Andreas J Forstner,Liz Forty,Mark Frye,Janice M Fullerton,Micha Gawlik,Ian R Gizer,Katherine Gordon-Smith,Melissa J Green,Maria Grigoroiu-Serbanescu,Josep Guzman-Parra,Tim Hahn,Frans Henskens,Jan Hillert,Assen V Jablensky,Lisa Jones,Ian Jones,Lina Jonsson,John R Kelsoe,Tilo Kircher,George Kirov,Sarah Kittel-Schneider,Manolis Kogevinas,Mikael Landen,Marion Leboyer,Melanie Lenger,Jolanta Lissowska,Christine Lochner,Carmel Loughland,Donald MacIntyre,Nicholas G Martin,Eirini Maratou,Carol A Mathews,Fermin Mayoral,Susan L McElroy,Nathaniel W McGregor,Andrew McIntosh,Andrew McQuillin,Patricia Michie,Philip B Mitchell,Paraskevi Moutsatsou,Bryan Mowry,Bertram Mueller-Myhsok,Richard Myers,Igor Nenadic,Markus M Noethen,Michael O'Donovan,Claire O'Donovan,Roel A Ophoff,Michael J Owen,Chris Pantelis,Carlos Pato,Michele T Pato,George P Patrinos,Joanna M Pawlak,Roy H Perlis,Evgenia Porichi,Danielle Posthuma,Josep Antoni Ramos-Quiroga,Andreas Reif,Eva Z Reininghaus,Marta Ribases,Marcella Rietschel,Ulrich Schall,Thomas G Schulze,Laura Scott,Rodney J Scott,Alessandro Serretti,Cynthia Shannon Weickert,Jordan W Smoller,Maria Soler Soler Artigas,Dan J Stein,Fabian Streit,Claudio Toma,Paul Tooney,Eduard Vieta,John B Vincent,Irwin D Waldman,Thomas Weickert,Stephanie H Witt,Beata Swiatkowska,Kyung Sue Sue Hong,Masashi Ikeda,Nakao Iwata,Hong-Hee Won,Howard J Edenberg,Stephan Ripke,Towfique Raj,Jonathan RI Coleman,Niamh Mullins

Journal

medRxiv

Published Date

2024

Bipolar disorder (BD) is a heritable mental illness with complex etiology. While the largest published genome-wide association study identified 64 BD risk loci, the causal SNPs and genes within these loci remain unknown. We applied a suite of statistical and functional fine-mapping methods to these loci, and prioritized 22 likely causal SNPs for BD. We mapped these SNPs to genes, and investigated their likely functional consequences by integrating variant annotations, brain cell-type epigenomic annotations, brain quantitative trait loci, and results from rare variant exome sequencing in BD. Convergent lines of evidence supported the roles of SCN2A, TRANK1, DCLK3, INSYN2B, SYNE1, THSD7A, CACNA1B, TUBBP5, PLCB3, PRDX5, KCNK4, AP001453.3, TRPT1, FKBP2, DNAJC4, RASGRP1, FURIN, FES, YWHAE, DPH1, GSDMB, MED24, THRA, EEF1A2, and KCNQ2 in BD. These represent promising candidates for functional experiments to understand biological mechanisms and therapeutic potential. Additionally, we demonstrated that fine-mapping effect sizes can improve performance and transferability of BD polygenic risk scores across ancestrally diverse populations, and present a high-throughput fine-mapping pipeline (https://github.com/mkoromina/SAFFARI).

Upregulated GIRK2 counteracts ethanol-induced changes in excitability & respiration in human neurons

Authors

Iya Prytkova,Yiyuan Liu,Michael Fernando,Isabel Gameiro-Ros,Dina Popova,Chella Kamarajan,Xiaoling Xuei,David B Chorlian,Howard J Edenberg,Jay A Tischfield,Bernice Porjesz,Zhiping P Pang,Ronald P Hart,Alison Goate,Paul A Slesinger

Journal

Journal of Neuroscience

Published Date

2024/2/12

Genome-wide association analysis (GWAS) of electroencephalographic endophenotypes for alcohol use disorder (AUD) has identified non-coding polymorphisms within the KCNJ6 gene. KCNJ6 encodes GIRK2, a subunit of a G protein-coupled inwardly-rectifying potassium channel that regulates neuronal excitability. How changes in GIRK2 affect human neuronal excitability and the response to repeated ethanol exposure is poorly understood. Here, we studied the effect of upregulating KCNJ6 using an isogenic approach with human glutamatergic neurons derived from induced pluripotent stem cells (male and female donors). Using multi-electrode-arrays, population calcium imaging, single-cell patch-clamp electrophysiology, and mitochondrial stress tests, we find that elevated GIRK2 acts in concert with 7-21 days of ethanol exposure to inhibit neuronal activity, to counteract ethanol-induced increases in …

What Risks Do Offspring of Parents With Alcohol Use Disorder Face?

Authors

Howard J Edenberg

Published Date

2024/4/1

Alcohol use disorder (AUD) has long been known to aggregate in families, and the prevalence of related disorders with which they are often comorbid (eg, drug use and other psychiatric disorders) are also elevated in those families. Understanding the basis for both the comorbidity and the familial aggregation is complicated because families share both genetics and much of their environment, both of which contribute to risk. Disentangling these two sources of risk is important if we wish to gain insight into mechanisms of vulnerability from which to develop more effective preventions, identify potential drugs, and better target treatments to individuals (personalized medicine). A study by Kendler et al. in this issue (1) examined parent and offspring data from a large Swedish population sample (over 1.2 million offspring in intact families, 102,940 of whom had parents with AUD) to determine the relative magnitude of …

Associations between alcohol use disorder polygenic score and remission in participants from high‐risk families and the Indiana Biobank

Authors

Dongbing Lai,Sally I‐Chun Kuo,Leah Wetherill,Fazil Aliev,Michael Zhang,Abreu Marco,Tae‐Hwi Schwantes‐An,Danielle Dick,Meredith W Francis,Emma C Johnson,Chella Kamarajan,Sivan Kinreich,Samuel Kuperman,Jacquelyn Meyers,John I Nurnberger,Yunlong Liu,Howard J Edenberg,Bernice Porjesz,Arpana Agrawal,Tatiana Foroud,Marc Schuckit,Martin H Plawecki,Kathleen K Bucholz,Vivia V McCutcheon

Journal

Alcohol: Clinical and Experimental Research

Published Date

2024/2

Background In the United States, ~50% of individuals who meet criteria for alcohol use disorder (AUD) during their lifetimes do not remit. We previously reported that a polygenic score for AUD (PGSAUD) was positively associated with AUD severity as measured by DSM‐5 lifetime criterion count, and AUD severity was negatively associated with remission. Thus, we hypothesized that PGSAUD would be negatively associated with remission. Methods Individuals of European (EA) and African ancestry (AA) from the Collaborative Study on the Genetics of Alcoholism (COGA) who met lifetime criteria for AUD, and two EA cohorts ascertained for studies of liver diseases and substance use disorders from the Indiana Biobank were included. In COGA, 12‐month remission was defined as any period of ≥12 consecutive months without meeting AUD criteria except craving and was further categorized as abstinent and non …

Genome-wide association analyses identify 95 risk loci and provide insights into the neurobiology of post-traumatic stress disorder

Authors

Caroline M Nievergelt,Adam X Maihofer,Elizabeth G Atkinson,Chia-Yen Chen,Karmel W Choi,Jonathan RI Coleman,Nikolaos P Daskalakis,Laramie E Duncan,Renato Polimanti,Cindy Aaronson,Ananda B Amstadter,Soren B Andersen,Ole A Andreassen,Paul A Arbisi,Allison E Ashley-Koch,S Bryn Austin,Esmina Avdibegoviç,Dragan Babić,Silviu-Alin Bacanu,Dewleen G Baker,Anthony Batzler,Jean C Beckham,Sintia Belangero,Corina Benjet,Carisa Bergner,Linda M Bierer,Joanna M Biernacka,Laura J Bierut,Jonathan I Bisson,Marco P Boks,Elizabeth A Bolger,Amber Brandolino,Gerome Breen,Rodrigo Affonseca Bressan,Richard A Bryant,Angela C Bustamante,Jonas Bybjerg-Grauholm,Marie Bækvad-Hansen,Anders D Børglum,Sigrid Børte,Leah Cahn,Joseph R Calabrese,Jose Miguel Caldas-de-Almeida,Chris Chatzinakos,Sheraz Cheema,Sean AP Clouston,Lucía Colodro-Conde,Brandon J Coombes,Carlos S Cruz-Fuentes,Anders M Dale,Shareefa Dalvie,Lea K Davis,Jürgen Deckert,Douglas L Delahanty,Michelle F Dennis,Frank Desarnaud,Christopher P DiPietro,Seth G Disner,Anna R Docherty,Katharina Domschke,Grete Dyb,Alma Džubur Kulenović,Howard J Edenberg,Alexandra Evans,Chiara Fabbri,Negar Fani,Lindsay A Farrer,Adriana Feder,Norah C Feeny,Janine D Flory,David Forbes,Carol E Franz,Sandro Galea,Melanie E Garrett,Bizu Gelaye,Joel Gelernter,Elbert Geuze,Charles F Gillespie,Slavina B Goleva,Scott D Gordon,Aferdita Goçi,Lana Ruvolo Grasser,Camila Guindalini,Magali Haas,Saskia Hagenaars,Michael A Hauser,Andrew C Heath,Sian MJ Hemmings,Victor Hesselbrock,Ian B Hickie,Kelleigh Hogan,David Michael Hougaard,Hailiang Huang,Laura M Huckins,Kristian Hveem,Miro Jakovljević,Arash Javanbakht,Gregory D Jenkins,Jessica Johnson,Ian Jones,Tanja Jovanovic,Karen-Inge Karstoft,Milissa L Kaufman,James L Kennedy,Ronald C Kessler,Alaptagin Khan,Nathan A Kimbrel,Anthony P King,Nastassja Koen,Roman Kotov,Henry R Kranzler,Kristi Krebs,William S Kremen,Pei-Fen Kuan,Bruce R Lawford,Lauren AM Lebois,Kelli Lehto,Daniel F Levey,Catrin Lewis,Israel Liberzon,Sarah D Linnstaedt,Mark W Logue,Adriana Lori,Yi Lu,Benjamin J Luft,Michelle K Lupton,Jurjen J Luykx,Iouri Makotkine,Jessica L Maples-Keller,Shelby Marchese,Charles Marmar,Nicholas G Martin,Gabriela A Martínez-Levy,Kerrie McAloney,Alexander McFarlane,Katie A McLaughlin,Samuel A McLean,Sarah E Medland,Divya Mehta,Jacquelyn Meyers,Vasiliki Michopoulos,Elizabeth A Mikita,Lili Milani,William Milberg,Mark W Miller,Rajendra A Morey,Charles Phillip Morris,Ole Mors,Preben Bo Mortensen,Mary S Mufford

Journal

Nature Genetics

Published Date

2024/4/18

Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) genetics are characterized by lower discoverability than most other psychiatric disorders. The contribution to biological understanding from previous genetic studies has thus been limited. We performed a multi-ancestry meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies across 1,222,882 individuals of European ancestry (137,136 cases) and 58,051 admixed individuals with African and Native American ancestry (13,624 cases). We identified 95 genome-wide significant loci (80 new). Convergent multi-omic approaches identified 43 potential causal genes, broadly classified as neurotransmitter and ion channel synaptic modulators (for example, GRIA1, GRM8 and CACNA1E), developmental, axon guidance and transcription factors (for example, FOXP2, EFNA5 and DCC), synaptic structure and function genes (for example, PCLO, NCAM1 and PDE4B) and endocrine or immune …

Functional 3'-UTR Variants Identify Regulatory Mechanisms Impacting Alcohol Use Disorder and Related Traits

Authors

Andy B Chen,Xuhong Yu,Kriti S Thapa,Hongyu Gao,Jill L Reiter,Xiaoling Xuei,Andy P Tsai,Gary E Landreth,Dongbing Lai,Yue Wang,Tatiana M Foroud,Jay A Tischfield,Howard J Edenberg,Yunlong Liu

Journal

bioRxiv

Published Date

2024

Although genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified loci associated with alcohol consumption and alcohol use disorder (AUD), they do not identify which variants are functional. To approach this, we evaluated the impact of variants in 3' untranslated regions (3'-UTRs) of genes in loci associated with substance use and neurological disorders using a massively parallel reporter assay (MPRA) in neuroblastoma and microglia cells. Functionally impactful variants explained a higher proportion of heritability of alcohol traits than non-functional variants. We identified genes whose 3'-UTR activities are associated with AUD and alcohol consumption by combining variant effects from MPRA with GWAS results. We examined their effects by evaluating gene expression after CRISPR inhibition of neuronal cells and stratifying brain tissue samples by MPRA-derived 3'-UTR activity. A pathway analysis of differentially expressed genes identified inflammation response pathways. These analyses suggest that variation in response to inflammation contributes to the propensity to increase alcohol consumption.

Genome-wide association study identifies 30 obsessive-compulsive disorder associated loci

Authors

Nora I Strom,Zachary F Gerring,Marco Galimberti,Dongmei Yu,Matthew W Halvorsen,Abdel Abdellaoui,Cristina Rodriguez-Fontenla,Julia M Sealock,Tim Bigdeli,Jonathan RI Coleman,Behrang Mahjani,Jackson G Thorp,Katharina Bey,Christie L Burton,Jurjen J Luykx,Gwyneth Zai,Silvia Alemany,Christine Andre,Kathleen D Askland,Nerisa Banaj,Cristina Barlassina,Judith Becker Nissen,O Joseph Bienvenu,Donald Black,Michael H Bloch,Julia Boberg,Sigrid Borte,Rosa Bosch,Michael Breen,Brian P Brennan,Helena Brentani,Joseph D Buxbaum,Jonas Bybjerg-Grauholm,Enda M Byrne,Judit Cabana-Dominguez,Beatriz Camarena,Adrian Camarena,Carolina Cappi,Angel Carracedo,Miguel Casas,Maria Cristina Cavallini,Valentina Ciullo,Edwin H Cook,Jesse Crosby,Bernadette AM Cullen,Elles J De Schipper,Richard Delorme,Srdjan Djurovic,Jason A Elias,Xavier Estivill,Martha J Falkenstein,Bengt T Fundin,Lauryn Garner,Chris German,Christina Gironda,Fernando S Goes,Marco A Grados,Jakob Grove,Wei Guo,Jan Haavik,Kristen Hagen,Kelly Harrington,Alexandra Havdahl,Kira D Hoeffler,Ana G Hounie,Donald Hucks,Christina Hultman,Magdalena Janecka,Eric Jenike,Elinor K Karlsson,Kara Kelley,Julia Klawohn,Janice E Krasnow,Kristi Krebs,Christoph Lange,Nuria Lanzagorta,Daniel Levey,Kerstin Lindblad-Toh,Fabio Macciardi,Brion Maher,Brittany Mathes,Evonne McArthur,Nathaniel McGregor,Nicole C McLaughlin,Sandra Meier,Euripedes C Miguel,Maureen Mulhern,Paul S Nestadt,Erika L Nurmi,Kevin S O'Connell,Lisa Osiecki,Olga Therese Ousdal,Teemu Palviainen,Nancy L Pedersen,Fabrizio Piras,Federica Piras,Sriramya Potluri,Raquel Rabionet,Alfredo Ramirez,Scott Rauch,Abraham Reichenberg,Mark A Riddle,Stephan Ripke,Maria C Rosario,Aline S Sampaio,Miriam A Schiele,Anne Heidi Skogholt,Laura G Sloofman G Sloofman,Jan Smit,Maria Soler Artigas,Laurent F Thomas,Eric Tifft,Homero Vallada,Nathanial van Kirk,Jeremy Veenstra-VanderWeele,Nienke NCC Vulink,Christopher P Walker,Ying Wang,Jens R Wendland,Bendik S Winsvold,Yin Yao,Hang Zhou,23andMe Research Team,VA Million Veteran Program,Estonian Biobank,CoGa research team,iPSYCH,HUNT research team,NORDiC,Arpana Agrawal,Pino Alonso,Goetz Berberich,Kathleen K Bucholz,Cynthia M Bulik,Danielle Cath,Damiaan Denys,Valsamma Eapen,Howard Edenberg,Peter Falkai,Thomas V Fernandez,Abby J Fyer,JM Gaziano,Dan A Geller,Hans J Grabe,Benjamin D Greenberg,Gregory L Hanna,Ian B Hickie,David M Hougaard,Norbert Kathmann,James Kennedy

Journal

medRxiv

Published Date

2024

Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) affects ~1% of the population and exhibits a high SNP-heritability, yet previous genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have provided limited information on the genetic etiology and underlying biological mechanisms of the disorder. We conducted a GWAS meta-analysis combining 53,660 OCD cases and 2,044,417 controls from 28 European-ancestry cohorts revealing 30 independent genome-wide significant SNPs and a SNP-based heritability of 6.7%. Separate GWAS for clinical, biobank, comorbid, and self-report sub-groups found no evidence of sample ascertainment impacting our results. Functional and positional QTL gene-based approaches identified 249 significant candidate risk genes for OCD, of which 25 were identified as putatively causal, highlighting WDR6, DALRD3, CTNND1 and genes in the MHC region. Tissue and single-cell enrichment analyses highlighted hippocampal and cortical excitatory neurons, along with D1- and D2-type dopamine receptor-containing medium spiny neurons, as playing a role in OCD risk. OCD displayed significant genetic correlations with 65 out of 112 examined phenotypes. Notably, it showed positive genetic correlations with all included psychiatric phenotypes, in particular anxiety, depression, anorexia nervosa, and Tourette syndrome, and negative correlations with a subset of the included autoimmune disorders, educational attainment, and body mass index.. This study marks a significant step toward unraveling its genetic landscape and advances understanding of OCD genetics, providing a foundation for future interventions to address this debilitating …

A Developmentally-Informative Genome-wide Association Study of Alcohol Use Frequency

Authors

Nathaniel S Thomas,Nathan A Gillespie,Grace Chan,Howard J Edenberg,Chella Kamarajan,Sally I-Chun Kuo,Alex P Miller,John I Nurnberger Jr,Jay Tischfield,Danielle M Dick,Jessica E Salvatore

Journal

Behavior Genetics

Published Date

2024/3

Contemporary genome-wide association study (GWAS) methods typically do not account for variability in genetic effects throughout development. We applied genomic structural equation modeling to combine developmentally-informative phenotype data and GWAS to create polygenic scores (PGS) for alcohol use frequency that are specific to developmental stage. Longitudinal cohort studies targeted for gene-identification analyses include the Collaborative Study on the Genetics of Alcoholism (adolescence n = 1,118, early adulthood n = 2,762, adulthood n = 5,255), the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (adolescence n = 3,089, early adulthood n = 3,993, adulthood n = 5,149), and the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC; adolescence n = 5,382, early adulthood n = 3,613). PGS validation analyses were conducted in the COGA sample using an …

The Collaborative Study on the Genetics of Alcoholism: Overview

Authors

Arpana Agrawal,Sarah J Brislin,Kathleen K Bucholz,Danielle Dick,Ronald P Hart,Emma C Johnson,Jacquelyn Meyers,Jessica Salvatore,Paul Slesinger,COGA Collaborators,Y Liu,MH Plawecki,C Kamarajan,A Pandey,L Bierut,J Rice,M Schuckit,D Scott,L Bauer,L Wetherill,X Xuei,D Lai,S O'Connor,G Chan,DB Chorlian,J Zhang,P Barr,S Kinreich,G Pandey,N Mullins,A Anokhin,S Hartz,V McCutcheon,S Saccone,J Moore,F Aliev,Z Pang,S Kuo,H Chin,A Parsian,Laura Almasy,Tatiana Foroud,Alison Goate,Victor Hesselbrock,John Kramer,Samuel Kuperman,Alison K Merikangas,John I Nurnberger,Jay Tischfield,Howard J Edenberg,Bernice Porjesz

Published Date

2023/10

Alcohol use disorders (AUD) are commonly occurring, heritable and polygenic disorders with etiological origins in the brain and the environment. To outline the causes and consequences of alcohol‐related milestones, including AUD, and their related psychiatric comorbidities, the Collaborative Study on the Genetics of Alcoholism (COGA) was launched in 1989 with a gene‐brain‐behavior framework. COGA is a family based, diverse (~25% self‐identified African American, ~52% female) sample, including data on 17,878 individuals, ages 7–97 years, in 2246 families of which a proportion are densely affected for AUD. All participants responded to questionnaires (e.g., personality) and the Semi‐Structured Assessment for the Genetics of Alcoholism (SSAGA) which gathers information on psychiatric diagnoses, conditions and related behaviors (e.g., parental monitoring). In addition, 9871 individuals have brain …

Identification of novel, replicable genetic risk loci for suicidal thoughts and behaviors among US military veterans

Authors

Nathan A Kimbrel,Allison E Ashley-Koch,Xue J Qin,Jennifer H Lindquist,Melanie E Garrett,Michelle F Dennis,Lauren P Hair,Jennifer E Huffman,Daniel A Jacobson,Ravi K Madduri,Jodie A Trafton,Hilary Coon,Anna R Docherty,Niamh Mullins,Douglas M Ruderfer,Philip D Harvey,Benjamin H McMahon,David W Oslin,Jean C Beckham,Elizabeth R Hauser,Michael A Hauser,Khushbu Agarwal,Mihaela Aslan,Edmond Begoli,Tanmoy Bhattacharya,Ben Brown,Patrick S Calhoun,Kei-Hoi Cheung,Sutanay Choudhury,Ashley M Cliff,Judith D Cohn,Silvia Crivelli,Leticia Cuellar-Hengartner,Haedi E Deangelis,Sayera Dhaubhadel,Patrick D Finley,Kumkum Ganguly,Michael R Garvin,Joel E Gelernter,Phillip D Harvey,Nick W Hengartner,Piet C Jones,David Kainer,Alan D Kaplan,Ira R Katz,Rachel L Kember,Angela C Kirby,John C Ko,Beauty Kolade,John H Lagergren,Matthew J Lane,Daniel F Levey,Drew Levin,Xianlian Liu,Carrie Manore,Susana B Martins,John F McCarthy,Mikaela McDevitt-Cashman,Izaak Miller,Destinee Morrow,Mirko Pavicic-Venegas,John Pestian,Saiju Pyarajan,Nallakkandi Rajeevan,Christine M Ramsey,Ruy Ribeiro,Alex Rodriguez,Jonathan Romero,Daniel Santel,Noah Schaefferkoetter,Yunling Shi,Murray B Stein,Kyle Sullivan,Ning Sun,Suzanne R Tamang,Alice Townsend,Angelica Walker,Xiange Wang,Victoria Wangia-Anderson,Renji Yang,Hong-Jun Yoon,Shinjae Yoo,Rafael Zamora-Resendiz,Hongyu Zhao,Anna R Docherty,Jonathan RI Coleman,Andrey Shabalin,JooEun Kang,Balasz Murnyak,Frank Wendt,Mark Adams,Adrian I Campos,Emily DiBlasi,Janice M Fullerton,Henry R Kranzler,Amanda Bakian,Eric T Monson,Miguel E Rentería,Ole A Andreassen,Cynthia M Bulik,Howard J Edenberg,Ronald C Kessler,J John Mann,John I Nurnberger,Giorgio Pistis,Fabian Streit,Robert J Ursano,Swapnil Awasthi,Andrew W Bergen,Wade H Berrettini,Martin Bohus,Harry Brandt,Xiao Chang,Hsi-Chung Chen,Wei J Chen,Erik D Christensen,Steven Crawford,Scott Crow,Philibert Duriez,Alexis C Edwards,Fernando Fernández-Aranda,Manfred M Fichter,Hanga Galfalvy,Steven Gallinger,Michael Gandal,Philip Gorwood,Yiran Guo,Jonathan D Hafferty,Hakon Hakonarson,Katherine A Halmi,Akitoyo Hishimoto,Sonia Jain,Stéphane Jamain,Susana Jiménez-Murcia,Craig Johnson,Allan S Kaplan,Walter H Kaye,Pamela K Keel,James L Kennedy,Minsoo Kim,Kelly L Klump,Daniel F Levey,Dong Li,Shih-Cheng Liao,Klaus Lieb,Lisa Lilenfeld,Adriana Lori,Pierre J Magistretti,Christian R Marshall,James E Mitchell

Journal

JAMA psychiatry

Published Date

2023/2/1

ImportanceSuicide is a leading cause of death; however, the molecular genetic basis of suicidal thoughts and behaviors (SITB) remains unknown.ObjectiveTo identify novel, replicable genomic risk loci for SITB.Design, Setting, and ParticipantsThis genome-wide association study included 633 778 US military veterans with and without SITB, as identified through electronic health records. GWAS was performed separately by ancestry, controlling for sex, age, and genetic substructure. Cross-ancestry risk loci were identified through meta-analysis. Study enrollment began in 2011 and is ongoing. Data were analyzed from November 2021 to August 2022.Main Outcome and MeasuresSITB.ResultsA total of 633 778 US military veterans were included in the analysis (57 152 [9%] female; 121 118 [19.1%] African ancestry, 8285 [1.3%] Asian ancestry, 452 767 [71.4%] European ancestry, and 51 608 [8.1%] Hispanic …

Multi-ancestry genome-wide association study of cannabis use disorder yields insight into disease biology and public health implications

Authors

Daniel F Levey,Marco Galimberti,Joseph D Deak,Frank R Wendt,Arjun Bhattacharya,Dora Koller,Kelly M Harrington,Rachel Quaden,Emma C Johnson,Priya Gupta,Mahantesh Biradar,Max Lam,Megan Cooke,Veera M Rajagopal,Stefany LL Empke,Hang Zhou,Yaira Z Nunez,Henry R Kranzler,Howard J Edenberg,Arpana Agrawal,Jordan W Smoller,Todd Lencz,David M Hougaard,Anders D Børglum,Ditte Demontis,Veterans Affairs Million Veteran Program,J Michael Gaziano,Michael J Gandal,Renato Polimanti,Murray B Stein,Joel Gelernter

Journal

Nature Genetics

Published Date

2023/12

As recreational use of cannabis is being decriminalized in many places and medical use widely sanctioned, there are growing concerns about increases in cannabis use disorder (CanUD), which is associated with numerous medical comorbidities. Here we performed a genome-wide association study of CanUD in the Million Veteran Program (MVP), followed by meta-analysis in 1,054,365 individuals (ncases = 64,314) from four broad ancestries designated by the reference panel used for assignment (European n = 886,025, African n = 123,208, admixed American n = 38,289 and East Asian n = 6,843). Population-specific methods were applied to calculate single nucleotide polymorphism-based heritability within each ancestry. Statistically significant single nucleotide polymorphism-based heritability for CanUD was observed in all but the smallest population (East Asian). We discovered genome-wide …

Clinical, genomic, and neurophysiological correlates of lifetime suicide attempts among individuals with alcohol dependence

Authors

Peter B Barr,Zoe Neale,Jessica Schulman,Niamh Mullins,Jian Zhang,David B Chorlian,Chella Kamarajan,Sivan Kinreich,Ashwini K Pandey,Gayathri Pandey,Stacey Saenz de Viteri,Laura Acion,Lance Bauer,Kathleen K Bucholz,Grace Chan,Michael Chao,Danielle M Dick,Howard J Edenberg,Tatiana Foroud,Alison Goate,Victor Hesselbrock,Emma C Johnson,John Kramer,Dongbing Lai,Martin H Plawecki,Jessica E Salvatore,Leah Wetherill,Arpana Agrawal,Bernice Porjesz,Jacquelyn L Meyers

Journal

medRxiv

Published Date

2023/4/29

Research has identified clinical, genomic, and neurophysiological markers associated with suicide attempts (SA) among individuals with psychiatric illness. However, there is limited research among those with an alcohol use disorder, despite their disproportionately higher rates of SA. We examined lifetime SA in 4,068 individuals with DSM-IV alcohol dependence from the Collaborative Study on the Genetics of Alcoholism (23% lifetime suicide attempt; 53% female; 17% Admixed African American ancestries; mean age: 38). We 1) explored clinical risk factors associated with SA, 2) conducted a genome-wide association study of SA, 3) examined whether individuals with a SA had elevated polygenic scores for comorbid psychiatric conditions (eg, alcohol use disorders, lifetime suicide attempt, and depression), and 4) explored differences in electroencephalogram neural functional connectivity between those with and …

COVID-19 pandemic stressors are associated with reported increases in frequency of drunkenness among individuals with a history of alcohol use disorder

Authors

Jacquelyn L Meyers,Vivia V McCutcheon,Kristina A Horne-Osipenko,Lawrence R Waters,Peter Barr,Grace Chan,David B Chorlian,Emma C Johnson,Sally I-Chun Kuo,John R Kramer,Danielle M Dick,Samuel Kuperman,Chella Kamarajan,Gayathri Pandey,Dzov Singman,Stacey Subbie-Saenz de Viteri,Jessica E Salvatore,Laura J Bierut,Tatiana Foroud,Alison Goate,Victor Hesselbrock,John Nurnberger,Martin H Plaweck,Marc A Schuckit,Arpana Agrawal,Howard J Edenberg,Kathleen K Bucholz,Bernice Porjesz

Journal

Translational psychiatry

Published Date

2023/10/6

Some sources report increases in alcohol use have been observed since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, particularly among women. Cross-sectional studies suggest that specific COVID-19-related stressful experiences (e.g., social disconnection) may be driving such increases in the general population. Few studies have explored these topics among individuals with a history of Alcohol Use Disorders (AUD), an especially vulnerable population. Drawing on recent data collected by the Collaborative Study on the Genetics of Alcoholism (COGA; COVID-19 study N = 1651, 62% women, age range: 30–91) in conjunction with AUD history data collected on the sample since 1990, we investigated associations of COVID-19 related stressors and coping activities with changes in drunkenness frequency since the start of the pandemic. Analyses were conducted for those without a history of AUD (N: 645) and three …

Specific diagnostic criteria identify those at high risk for progression from'preaddiction'to severe alcohol use disorder

Authors

Alex P Miller,Sally I-Chun Kuo,Emma C Johnson,Rebecca Tillman,Sarah J Brislin,Danielle M Dick,Chella Kamarajan,Sivan Kinreich,John Kramer,Vivia V McCutcheon,Martin H Plawecki,Bernice Porjesz,Marc A Schuckit,Jessica E Salvatore,Howard J Edenberg,Kathleen K Bucholz,Jacquelyn L Meyers,Arpana Agrawal

Journal

medRxiv

Published Date

2023

Importance: Both current DSM-5 diagnoses of substance use disorders (SUDs) and the recent "preaddiction" conceptual proposal (i.e., mild-to-moderate SUD) rely on criterion count-based approaches, without consideration of evidence regarding varying severity grading indexed by individual criteria. Objective: To examine correlates of alcohol use disorder (AUD) across count-based severity groups (i.e., mild, moderate, mild-to-moderate, severe), identify specific diagnostic criteria indicative of greater severity, and evaluate whether the presence of specific criteria within mild-to-moderate AUD differentiates across relevant correlates and manifests in greater hazards of severe AUD development. Design: Cross-sectional and longitudinal cohort study. Setting: Family-based study of individuals from seven sites across the United States. Participants: Cross-sectional (N=13,110; mean [SD] age, 37.8 [14.2] years) and longitudinal cohorts (N=2,818; mean baseline [SD] age, 16.1 [3.2] years) from the Collaborative Study on the Genetics of Alcoholism (COGA). Exposure: N/A Main Outcomes and Measures: Sociodemographic, alcohol-related, psychiatric comorbidity (major depressive disorder, antisocial personality disorder, and other SUDs), brain electroencephalography (EEG), and AUD polygenic score measures as correlates of DSM-5 AUD levels (i.e., mild, moderate, severe) and criterion severity-defined "preaddiction" (i.e., low-risk vs. high-risk mild-to-moderate) AUD diagnostic groups. Results: Associations with alcohol-related, psychiatric, EEG, and AUD polygenic score measures reinforced the role of increasing criterion counts as indexing severity …

RNA alternative splicing impacts the risk for alcohol use disorder

Authors

Rudong Li,Jill L Reiter,Andy B Chen,Steven X Chen,Tatiana Foroud,Howard J Edenberg,Dongbing Lai,Yunlong Liu

Journal

Molecular Psychiatry

Published Date

2023/7

Alcohol use disorder (AUD) is a complex genetic disorder characterized by problems arising from excessive alcohol consumption. Identifying functional genetic variations that contribute to risk for AUD is a major goal. Alternative splicing of RNA mediates the flow of genetic information from DNA to gene expression and expands proteome diversity. We asked whether alternative splicing could be a risk factor for AUD. Herein, we used a Mendelian randomization (MR)-based approach to identify skipped exons (the predominant splicing event in brain) that contribute to AUD risk. Genotypes and RNA-seq data from the CommonMind Consortium were used as the training dataset to develop predictive models linking individual genotypes to exon skipping in the prefrontal cortex. We applied these models to data from the Collaborative Studies on Genetics of Alcoholism to examine the association between the imputed cis …

See List of Professors in Howard Edenberg University(Indiana University Bloomington)

Howard Edenberg FAQs

What is Howard Edenberg's h-index at Indiana University Bloomington?

The h-index of Howard Edenberg has been 55 since 2020 and 114 in total.

What are Howard Edenberg's top articles?

The articles with the titles of

Polygenic Risk for Alcohol Use Disorder Affects Cellular Responses to Ethanol Exposure in a Human Microglial Cell Model

A phenome-wide association and Mendelian randomisation study of alcohol use variants in a diverse cohort comprising over 3 million individuals

Cross-ancestry genetic investigation of schizophrenia, cannabis use disorder, and tobacco smoking

A polygenic resilience score moderates the genetic risk for schizophrenia: Replication in 18,090 cases and 28,114 controls from the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium

Examining associations between genetic and neural risk for externalizing behaviors in adolescence and early adulthood

Fine-mapping genomic loci refines bipolar disorder risk genes

Upregulated GIRK2 counteracts ethanol-induced changes in excitability & respiration in human neurons

What Risks Do Offspring of Parents With Alcohol Use Disorder Face?

...

are the top articles of Howard Edenberg at Indiana University Bloomington.

What are Howard Edenberg's research interests?

The research interests of Howard Edenberg are: Genetics and Genomics of common disorders

What is Howard Edenberg's total number of citations?

Howard Edenberg has 51,396 citations in total.

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