The mechanisms by which common risk variants of small effect interact to contribute to complex genetic disorders remain unclear. Here, we apply a genetic approach, using isogenic human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs), to evaluate the effects of schizophrenia-associated common variants predicted to function as brain expression quantitative trait loci (SZ-eQTLs). By integrating CRISPR-mediated gene editing, activation and repression technologies to study one putative SZ-eQTL (FURIN rs4702) and four top-ranked SZ-eQTL genes (FURIN, SNAP91, TSNARE1, CLCN3), our platform resolves pre-and post-synaptic neuronal deficits, recapitulates genotype-dependent gene expression differences, and identifies convergence downstream of SZ-eQTL gene perturbations. Our observations highlight the cell-type-specific effects of common variants and demonstrate a synergistic effect between SZ-eQTL genes that converges on synaptic function. We propose that the links between rare and common variants implicated in psychiatric disease risk constitute a potentially generalizable phenomenon occurring more widely in complex genetic disorders.
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