Jessica Johnson

Jessica Johnson
  • Master of Public Health
  • Data Scientist at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

About

107
Publications
19,160
Reads
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7,243
Citations
Current institution
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Current position
  • Data Scientist
Additional affiliations
April 2019 - present
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Position
  • Analyst
April 2018 - April 2019
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Position
  • Administrator
March 2012 - April 2018
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Position
  • Laboratory Manager
Education
August 2017 - June 2019
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Field of study
  • Epidemiology
August 2009 - June 2011
Pratt Institute
Field of study
  • New Forms
August 2002 - August 2006
Duke University
Field of study
  • Biology

Publications

Publications (107)
Article
Full-text available
Osteoarthritis is the third most rapidly growing health condition associated with disability, after dementia and diabetes¹. By 2050, the total number of patients with osteoarthritis is estimated to reach 1 billion worldwide². As no disease-modifying treatments exist for osteoarthritis, a better understanding of disease aetiopathology is urgently ne...
Preprint
Background: The Eating Disorders Genetics Initiative 2 (EDGI2) is designed to explore the role of genes and environment in anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, binge-eating disorder, and avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID) with a focus on diverse populations and severe and/or longstanding illness.Methods: A total of 20,000 new participa...
Preprint
Background: The Eating Disorders Genetics Initiative 2 (EDGI2) is designed to explore the role of genes and environment in anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, binge-eating disorder, and avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID) with a focus on diverse populations and severe and/or longstanding illness.Methods: A total of 20,000 new participa...
Article
Full-text available
Bipolar disorder is a leading contributor to the global burden of disease¹. Despite high heritability (60–80%), the majority of the underlying genetic determinants remain unknown². We analysed data from participants of European, East Asian, African American and Latino ancestries (n = 158,036 cases with bipolar disorder, 2.8 million controls), combi...
Article
Objective Self‐report measures of ARFID symptoms (e.g., Nine‐Item Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder Screen [NIAS]) are used to assess symptom differences between groups. Measurement invariance techniques clarify if groups interpret a measure similarly, providing a foundation for examining group differences. Considering age and reporter stat...
Preprint
Full-text available
Genome-wide association studies identify common genomic variants associated with disease across a population. Individual environmental effects are often not included, despite evidence that environment mediates genomic regulation of higher order biology. Body mass index (BMI) is associated with complex disorders across clinical specialties, yet has...
Article
Full-text available
Adenosine-to-inosine (A-to-I) editing is a prevalent post-transcriptional RNA modification within the brain. Yet, most research has relied on postmortem samples, assuming it is an accurate representation of RNA biology in the living brain. We challenge this assumption by comparing A-to-I editing between postmortem and living prefrontal cortical tis...
Preprint
The prefrontal cortex (PFC) is a region of the brain that in humans is involved in the production of higher-order functions such as cognition, emotion, perception, and behavior. Neurotransmission in the PFC produces higher-order functions by integrating information from other areas of the brain. At the foundation of neurotransmission, and by extens...
Preprint
Full-text available
Adenosine-to-inosine (A-to-I) editing is a prevalent post-transcriptional RNA modification within the brain. Yet, most research has relied on postmortem samples, assuming it is an accurate representation of RNA biology in the living brain. We challenge this assumption by comparing A-to-I editing between postmortem and living prefrontal cortical tis...
Article
Full-text available
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 anc...
Article
Full-text available
Problematic alcohol use (PAU), a trait that combines alcohol use disorder and alcohol-related problems assessed with a questionnaire, is a leading cause of death and morbidity worldwide. Here we conducted a large cross-ancestry meta-analysis of PAU in 1,079,947 individuals (European, N = 903,147; African, N = 122,571; Latin American, N = 38,962; Ea...
Article
Full-text available
Open science ensures that research is transparently reported and freely accessible for all to assess and collaboratively build on. Psychiatric genetics has led among the health sciences in implementing some open science practices in common study designs, such as replication as part of genome-wide association studies. However, thorough open science...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background The Avoidant Restrictive Food Intake Disorder Genes and Environment (ARFID-GEN) study is a study of genetic and environmental factors that contribute to risk for developing ARFID in children and adults. Methods A total of 3,000 children and adults with ARFID from the United States will be included. Parents/guardians and their children w...
Preprint
A central goal of neuroscience is to advance knowledge of the molecular basis of human brain function. Most molecular studies of the human brain have been performed using tissue from postmortem brain donors rather than living people. The assumption underlying this practice - which had never been rigorously tested prior to this report - is that the...
Preprint
Full-text available
Genetic studies of schizophrenia (SCZ) reveal a complex polygenic risk architecture comprised of hundreds of risk variants, the majority of which are common in the population at-large and confer only modest increases in disorder risk. Precisely how genetic variants with individually small predicted effects on gene expression combine to yield substa...
Article
Full-text available
Schizophrenia (SCZ) is a chronic mental illness and among the most debilitating conditions encountered in medical practice. A recent landmark SCZ study of the protein-coding regions of the genome identified a causal role for ten genes and a concentration of rare variant signals in evolutionarily constrained genes1. This recent study—and most other...
Article
Full-text available
Polygenic risk scores (PRSs) have been among the leading advances in biomedicine in recent years. As a proxy of genetic liability, PRSs are utilised across multiple fields and applications. While numerous statistical and machine learning methods have been developed to optimise their predictive accuracy, these typically distil genetic liability to a...
Preprint
Full-text available
Problematic alcohol use (PAU) is a leading cause of death and disability worldwide. To improve our understanding of the genetics of PAU, we conducted a large cross-ancestry meta-analysis of PAU in 1,079,947 individuals. We observed a high degree of cross-ancestral similarity in the genetic architecture of PAU and identified 110 independent risk var...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background Chronic pain is a common, poorly-understood condition. Genetic studies including genome wide association studies (GWAS) identify many relevant variants, which have yet to be translated into full understanding of chronic pain. Transcriptome wide association study using transcriptomic imputation (TI) methods such as S-PrediXcan can help br...
Article
Full-text available
Post-acute sequelae of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection are debilitating, clinically heterogeneous and of unknown molecular etiology. A transcriptome-wide investigation was performed in 165 acutely infected hospitalized individuals who were followed clinically into the post-acute period. Distinct gene expressio...
Preprint
Full-text available
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) requires an exposure to trauma for diagnosis by the DSM-V. Despite this, there is no documented linear relationship between degree of trauma and severity/chronicity of PTSD. To determine whether traumatic and stressful life events (TSLEs) collected from Electronic Health Records (EHR) interact with PTSD genetics...
Preprint
Open science is a set of practices to ensure that all research elements are transparently reported and freely accessible for all to learn, assess, and build on. Psychiatric genetics has led among the health sciences in implementing some open science practices in common study designs, such as replication as part of genome-wide association studies. H...
Article
Full-text available
Background Weight trajectories might reflect individual health status. In this study, we aimed to examine the clinical and genetic associations of adult weight trajectories using electronic health records (EHRs) in the BioMe Biobank. Methods We constructed four weight trajectories based on a-priori definitions of weight changes (5% or 10%) using a...
Article
Full-text available
Substantial progress has been made in the understanding of anorexia nervosa (AN) and eating disorder (ED) genetics through the efforts of large-scale collaborative consortia, yielding the first genome-wide significant loci, AN-associated genes, and insights into metabo-psychiatric underpinnings of the disorders. However, the translatability, genera...
Article
Full-text available
Background Anorexia nervosa (AN) is a psychiatric disorder with complex etiology, with a significant portion of disease risk imparted by genetics. Traditional genome-wide association studies (GWAS) produce principal evidence for the association of genetic variants with disease. Transcriptomic imputation (TI) allows for the translation of those vari...
Article
Full-text available
Despite experiencing a significant trauma, only a subset of World Trade Center (WTC) rescue and recovery workers developed posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Identification of biomarkers is critical to the development of targeted interventions for treating disaster responders and potentially preventing the development of PTSD in this population....
Article
Full-text available
Chromosomal organization, scaling from the 147-base pair (bp) nucleosome to megabase-ranging domains encompassing multiple transcriptional units, including heritability loci for psychiatric traits, remains largely unexplored in the human brain. In this study, we constructed promoter- and enhancer-enriched nucleosomal histone modification landscapes...
Preprint
Full-text available
Schizophrenia is a chronic mental illness that is amongst the most debilitating conditions encountered in medical practice. A recent landmark schizophrenia study of the protein-coding regions of the genome identified a causal role for ten genes and a concentration of rare variant signals in evolutionarily constrained genes1. This study -- and most...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background Longitudinal weight trajectories may reflect individual health status. We examined the genetic aetiology and clinical consequences of adult weight trajectories in males and females leveraging genetic and phenotypic data in the electronic health records (EHR) of the Bio Me ™ Biobank. Methods We constructed four longitudinal weight trajec...
Preprint
Full-text available
Paragraph Two years into the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, the post-acute sequelae of infection are compounding the global health crisis. Often debilitating, these sequelae are clinically heterogeneous and of unknown molecular etiology. Here, a transcriptome-wide investigation of this new condition was performed in a large cohort of acutely infected patient...
Preprint
Full-text available
Polygenic risk scores (PRSs) have been among the leading advances in biomedicine in recent years. As a proxy of genetic liability, PRSs are utilised across multiple fields and applications. While numerous statistical and machine learning methods have been developed to optimise their predictive accuracy, all of these distil genetic liability to a si...
Preprint
Full-text available
To explore modular organization of chromosomes in schizophrenia (SCZ) and bipolar disorder (BD), we applied 'population-scale' correlational structuring of 739 histone H3-lysine 27 acetylation and H3-lysine 4 trimethylation profiles, generated from the prefrontal cortex (PFC) of 568 cases and controls. Neuronal histone acetylomes and methylomes ass...
Article
Full-text available
Bipolar disorder is a heritable mental illness with complex etiology. We performed a genome-wide association study of 41,917 bipolar disorder cases and 371,549 controls of European ancestry, which identified 64 associated genomic loci. Bipolar disorder risk alleles were enriched in genes in synaptic signaling pathways and brain-expressed genes, par...
Preprint
Full-text available
Despite experiencing a significant trauma, only a subset of World Trade Center (WTC) rescue and recovery workers developed posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Identification of biomarkers is critical to the development of targeted interventions for treating disaster responders and potentially preventing the development of PTSD in this population....
Article
Full-text available
A Correction to this paper has been published: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41591-021-01247-3.
Preprint
Full-text available
Anorexia nervosa (AN) is a psychiatric disorder with complex etiology, with a significant portion of disease risk imparted by genetics. Traditional GWAS studies produce principal evidence for the association of genetic variants with disease, and provide a jumping-off point for downstream functional analyses. Transcriptomic imputation (TI) allows fo...
Preprint
Full-text available
Current phenotype classifiers for large biobanks with coupled electronic health records EHR and multi-omic data rely on ICD-10 codes for definition. However, ICD-10 codes are primarily designed for billing purposes, and may be insufficient for research. Nuanced phenotypes composed of a patients' experience in the EHR will allow us to create precisi...
Preprint
Full-text available
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a debilitating psychiatric condition occurring in individuals exposed to trauma. The study of PTSD is complicated by highly heterogeneous presentations and experiences of trauma. Here, we studied genetic correlates of PTSD and resilience among a group of responders to the World Trade Center (WTC) 9/11/2001 a...
Article
Full-text available
The availability of high-quality RNA-sequencing and genotyping data of post-mortem brain collections from consortia such as CommonMind Consortium (CMC) and the Accelerating Medicines Partnership for Alzheimer’s Disease (AMP-AD) Consortium enable the generation of a large-scale brain cis-eQTL meta-analysis. Here we generate cerebral cortical eQTL fr...
Preprint
Full-text available
Bipolar disorder (BD) is a heritable mental illness with complex etiology. We performed a genome-wide association study (GWAS) of 41,917 BD cases and 371,549 controls, which identified 64 associated genomic loci. BD risk alleles were enriched in genes in synaptic and calcium signaling pathways and brain-expressed genes, particularly those with high...
Article
Full-text available
The ‘discovery’ stage of genome-wide association studies required amassing large, homogeneous cohorts. In order to attain clinically useful insights, we must now consider the presentation of disease within our clinics and, by extension, within our medical records. Large-scale use of electronic health record (EHR) data can help to understand phenoty...
Article
Full-text available
An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.
Article
Full-text available
Structural variants (SVs) contribute to many disorders, yet, functionally annotating them remains a major challenge. Here, we integrate SVs with RNA-sequencing from human post-mortem brains to quantify their dosage and regulatory effects. We show that genic and regulatory SVs exist at significantly lower frequencies than intergenic SVs. Functional...
Article
Full-text available
Transcription at enhancers is a widespread phenomenon which produces so-called enhancer RNA (eRNA) and occurs in an activity-dependent manner. However, the role of eRNA and its utility in exploring disease-associated changes in enhancer function, and the downstream coding transcripts that they regulate, is not well established. We used transcriptom...
Article
Background: Genetic studies of schizophrenia have implicated numerous risk loci including several copy number variants (CNVs) of large effect and hundreds of loci of small effect. In only a few cases has a specific gene been clearly identified. Rare CNVs affecting a single gene offer a potential avenue to discovering schizophrenia risk genes. Met...
Article
Full-text available
Schizophrenia and bipolar disorder are serious mental illnesses that affect more than 2% of adults. While large-scale genetics studies have identified genomic regions associated with disease risk, less is known about the molecular mechanisms by which risk alleles with small effects lead to schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. In order to fill this g...
Preprint
Full-text available
Structural variants (SVs) contribute substantially to risk of many brain related disorders including autism and schizophrenia. However, annotating the potential contribution of SVs to disease remains a major challenge. Here, we integrated high resolution SV calling from genome-sequencing in 755 human post-mortem brains with dorsal lateral prefronta...
Article
Full-text available
Bipolar disorder is a highly heritable psychiatric disorder. We performed a genome-wide association study (GWAS) including 20,352 cases and 31,358 controls of European descent, with follow-up analysis of 822 variants with P < 1 × 10−4 in an additional 9,412 cases and 137,760 controls. Eight of the 19 variants that were genome-wide significant (P <...
Article
2020, The Author(s). The availability of high-quality RNA-sequencing and genotyping data of post-mortem brain collections from consortia such as CommonMind Consortium (CMC) and the Accelerating Medicines Partnership for Alzheimer’s Disease (AMP-AD) Consortium enable the generation of a large-scale brain cis-eQTL meta-analysis. Here we generate cere...
Article
Full-text available
Background Genomic dysregulation is likely to contribute to neuronal dysfunction in prefrontal cortex (PFC) and other brain regions affected in schizophrenia (SCZ), but genome-scale mapping of neuronal transcriptomes and epigenomes has not been conducted in larger cohorts. We have shown recently that the genomic landscape of open chromatin-associat...
Preprint
Full-text available
Genetic studies of schizophrenia (SCZ) have now implicated numerous genomic loci that contribute to risk including several copy number variants (CNV) of large effect and hundreds of associated loci of small effect. However, in only a few cases has a specific gene been clearly identified. Rare CNV that affect only a single gene offer a potential ave...
Article
Background The contribution of non-coding genomic elements remains largely unexplored in Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD). Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) are increasingly recognized for their role in transcription regulation, and likely contribute to transcriptome dysregulation in ASD. Methods We are applying a combination of short-read and long-re...
Article
Full-text available
Risk variants for schizophrenia affect more than 100 genomic loci, yet cell- and tissue-specific roles underlying disease liability remain poorly characterized. We have generated for two cortical areas implicated in psychosis, the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and anterior cingulate cortex, 157 reference maps from neuronal, neuron-depleted and bul...
Article
Full-text available
Causal genes and variants within genome-wide association study (GWAS) loci can be identified by integrating GWAS statistics with expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL) and determining which variants underlie both GWAS and eQTL signals. Most analyses, however, consider only the marginal eQTL signal, rather than dissect this signal into multiple c...
Preprint
Full-text available
Bipolar disorder is a highly heritable psychiatric disorder that features episodes of mania and depression. We performed the largest genome-wide association study to date, including 20,352 cases and 31,358 controls of European descent, with follow-up analysis of 822 sentinel variants at loci with P<1×10 ⁻⁴ in an independent sample of 9,412 cases an...
Article
Genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have identified a multitude of genetic loci involved with traits and diseases. However, it is often unclear which genes are affected in such loci and whether the associated genetic variants lead to increased or decreased gene function. To mitigate this, we integrated associations of common genetic variants in...
Article
Full-text available
Over 100 genetic loci harbor schizophrenia-associated variants, yet how these variants confer liability is uncertain. The CommonMind Consortium sequenced RNA from dorsolateral prefrontal cortex of people with schizophrenia (N = 258) and control subjects (N = 279), creating a resource of gene expression and its genetic regulation. Using this resourc...
Preprint
Full-text available
Over 100 genetic loci harbor schizophrenia associated variants, yet how these common variants confer risk is uncertain. The CommonMind Consortium has sequenced dorsolateral prefrontal cortex RNA from schizophrenia cases (n=258) and control subjects (n=279), creating the largest publicly available resource to date of gene expression and its genetic...
Article
Full-text available
Converging evidence indicates that microRNAs (miRNAs) may contribute to disease risk for schizophrenia (SZ). We show that microRNA-9 (miR-9) is abundantly expressed in control neural progenitor cells (NPCs) but also significantly downregulated in a subset of SZ NPCs. We observed a strong correlation between miR-9 expression and miR-9 regulatory act...
Article
Full-text available
Genetic associations involving both rare and common alleles have been reported for schizophrenia but there have been no systematic scans for rare recessive genotypes using fully phased trio data. Here, we use exome sequencing in 604 schizophrenia proband-parent trios to investigate the role of recessive (homozygous or compound heterozygous) nonsyno...
Article
Full-text available
Inherited alleles account for most of the genetic risk for schizophrenia. However, new (de novo) mutations, in the form of large chromosomal copy number changes, occur in a small fraction of cases and disproportionally disrupt genes encoding postsynaptic proteins. Here we show that small de novo mutations, affecting one or a few nucleotides, are ov...
Article
Full-text available
Given the importance of cardiovascular disease (CVD) to public health and the demonstrated heritability of both disease status and its related risk factors, identifying the genetic variation underlying these susceptibilities is a critical step in understanding the pathogenesis of CVD and informing prevention and treatment strategies. Although one c...
Data
Displayed are the maximum two-point LOD score at theta equal zero (MaxLOD) for each biomarker by chromosome, with the name of the probe (RS number), the centimorgan (cM) position of the probe, and the gene annotation for the SNP (or the closest gene for intergenic SNPs). (DOCX)
Data
Genome-wide autosomal multipoint linkage results for each biomarker (for those not already presented in main manuscript). (DOCX)
Data
Percent of samples measured as below lower limits of quantification for a given biomarker assay. (DOCX)
Data
Chromosome linkage plots for the most significant multipoint linkage peaks. (DOCX)
Article
Full-text available
Coronary artery disease (CAD), and one of its intermediate risk factors, dyslipidemia, possess a demonstrable genetic component, although the genetic architecture is incompletely defined. We previously reported a linkage peak on chromosome 5q31-33 for early-onset CAD where the strength of evidence for linkage was increased in families with higher m...
Data
Linkage disequilibrium patterns of select SNPs in SPOCK1. LD pattern using Haploview, with r-squared values displayed within each box and the shading of the boxes corresponding do D' values.
Data
Association of SNPs with Degree of Atherosclerosis in the Aorta Samples. Displayed are results of association of SNPs with degree of atherosclerosis in the aorta samples, with each significant SNP listed followed by their genic position, base pair position, p-value, odds ratio, and 95% confidence interval for the genotypic and allelic models.
Data
Linkage disequilibrium patterns of select SNPs in PPP2R2B. LD pattern using Haploview, with r-squared values displayed within each box and the shading of the boxes corresponding do D' values.
Article
The genetic contributions to the multifactorial disorder osteoarthritis (OA) have been increasingly recognized. The goal of the current study was to use OA-related biomarkers of severity and disease burden as quantitative traits to identify genetic susceptibility loci for OA. In a large multigenerational extended family (n = 350), we measured 5 OA-...
Article
Full-text available
Autism comprises a spectrum of behavioral and cognitive disturbances of childhood development and is known to be highly heritable. Although numerous approaches have been used to identify genes implicated in the development of autism, less than 10% of autism cases have been attributed to single gene disorders. We describe the use of high-resolution...
Data
OXTR promoter CpG methylation status in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) of 10 autistic females and 10 age-matched controls.

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