Common variants on chromosome 6p22.1 are associated with schizophrenia
Jianxin Shi(Stanford University), Douglas F. Levinson(Stanford University), Jubao Duan, Alan R. Sanders, Yonglan Zheng, Itsik Pe’er(Columbia University), Frank Dudbridge(MRC Biostatistics Unit), Peter Holmans(Cardiff University), Alice S. Whittemore(Stanford University), Bryan Mowry(Queensland Centre for Mental Health Research), Ann Olincy(University of Colorado Denver), Farooq Amin(Veterans Health Administration), C. Robert Cloninger, Jeremy M. Silverman(Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai), Nancy G. Buccola(Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center New Orleans), William Byerley(University of California, San Francisco), Donald W. Black(University of Iowa), Raymond R. Crowe(University of Iowa), Jorge R. Oksenberg, Daniel B. Mirel(Broad Institute), Kenneth S. Kendler(Virginia Commonwealth University), Robert Freedman(University of Colorado Denver), Pablo V. Gejman
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