Singleton deletions throughout the genome increase risk of bipolar disorder

Dandan Zhang(Qingdao University), Elliot S. Gershon(University of Chicago), Wade H. Berrettini, John R. Kelsoe(University of California San Diego), Tiffany A. Greenwood(University of Southern California), John Rice(Washington University in St. Louis), Caroline M. Nievergelt(University of California San Diego), William Byerley, Erin N. Smith(Scripps Institution of Oceanography), Márcio Hipólito(Howard University), Daphne Koller(Indiana University School of Medicine), Howard J. Edenberg(Indiana University School of Medicine), Tatiana Foroud(University of Southern California), John I. Nürnberger(University School), Szabocls Szelinger(Translational Genomics Research Institute), William Coryell(National Institute of Mental Health), Lijun Cheng(The Ohio State University), David Craig(Translational Genomics Research Institute), Peter P. Zandi(Johns Hopkins University), James B. Potash(Johns Hopkins University), T G Schulze(United States Department of Health and Human Services), Cinnamon S. Bloss(Scripps Research Institute), Nicholas J. Schork(Scripps Research Institute), William Lawson(George Washington University), M. G. McInnis(University of Michigan), Sebastian Zöllner(University of Michigan), Francis J. McMahon(Behavioral Pharma (United States)), W Sheftner(Rush University), Chunyu Liu(Central South University), Thomas B. Barrett(University of California San Diego), Evaristus Nwulia(Howard University), Yudong Qian(University of Chicago), Susan L. Christian(Unknown), Ney Alliey‐Rodriguez, Pamela L. Belmonte(Johns Hopkins University), Roger M. McKinney(University of California San Diego)
Molecular Psychiatry
December 30, 2008
Cited by 148


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