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1.
Transl Psychiatry ; 7(4): e1093, 2017 04 18.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28418402

RÉSUMÉ

We undertook an RNA sequencing (RNAseq)-based transcriptomic profiling study on lymphoblastoid cell lines of a European ancestry sample of 529 schizophrenia cases and 660 controls, and found 1058 genes to be differentially expressed by affection status. These differentially expressed genes were enriched for involvement in immunity, especially the 697 genes with higher expression in cases. Comparing the current RNAseq transcriptomic profiling to our previous findings in an array-based study of 268 schizophrenia cases and 446 controls showed a highly significant positive correlation over all genes. Fifteen (18%) of the 84 genes with significant (false discovery rate<0.05) expression differences between cases and controls in the previous study and analyzed here again were differentially expressed by affection status here at a genome-wide significance level (Bonferroni P<0.05 adjusted for 8141 analyzed genes in total, or P<~6.1 × 10-6), all with the same direction of effect, thus providing corroborative evidence despite each sample of fully independent subjects being studied by different technological approaches. Meta-analysis of the RNAseq and array data sets (797 cases and 1106 controls) showed 169 additional genes (besides those found in the primary RNAseq-based analysis) to be differentially expressed, and provided further evidence of immune gene enrichment. In addition to strengthening our previous array-based gene expression differences in schizophrenia cases versus controls and providing transcriptomic support for some genes implicated by other approaches for schizophrenia, our study detected new genes differentially expressed in schizophrenia. We highlight RNAseq-based differential expression of various genes involved in neurodevelopment and/or neuronal function, and discuss caveats of the approach.


Sujet(s)
, Analyse de profil d'expression de gènes , Schizophrénie/génétique , Schizophrénie/immunologie , Analyse de séquence d'ARN , Adulte , Encéphale/immunologie , Encéphale/métabolisme , Études cas-témoins , Femelle , Étude d'association pangénomique , Humains , Mâle , Adulte d'âge moyen , Statistiques comme sujet
2.
Psychol Med ; 45(7): 1379-88, 2015 May.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25399360

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND: Findings from family and twin studies support a genetic contribution to the development of sexual orientation in men. However, previous studies have yielded conflicting evidence for linkage to chromosome Xq28. METHOD: We conducted a genome-wide linkage scan on 409 independent pairs of homosexual brothers (908 analyzed individuals in 384 families), by far the largest study of its kind to date. RESULTS: We identified two regions of linkage: the pericentromeric region on chromosome 8 (maximum two-point LOD = 4.08, maximum multipoint LOD = 2.59), which overlaps with the second strongest region from a previous separate linkage scan of 155 brother pairs; and Xq28 (maximum two-point LOD = 2.99, maximum multipoint LOD = 2.76), which was also implicated in prior research. CONCLUSIONS: Results, especially in the context of past studies, support the existence of genes on pericentromeric chromosome 8 and chromosome Xq28 influencing development of male sexual orientation.


Sujet(s)
Chromosomes humains de la paire 8/génétique , Chromosomes X humains/génétique , Liaison génétique/génétique , Étude d'association pangénomique , Homosexualité masculine/génétique , Adulte , Humains , Mâle , Fratrie , États-Unis
3.
Mol Psychiatry ; 19(1): 37-40, 2014 Jan.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24217254

RÉSUMÉ

A number of large, rare copy number variants (CNVs) are deleterious for neurodevelopmental disorders, but large, rare, protective CNVs have not been reported for such phenotypes. Here we show in a CNV analysis of 47 005 individuals, the largest CNV analysis of schizophrenia to date, that large duplications (1.5-3.0 Mb) at 22q11.2--the reciprocal of the well-known, risk-inducing deletion of this locus--are substantially less common in schizophrenia cases than in the general population (0.014% vs 0.085%, OR=0.17, P=0.00086). 22q11.2 duplications represent the first putative protective mutation for schizophrenia.


Sujet(s)
Malformations multiples/génétique , Duplication chromosomique/génétique , Variations de nombre de copies de segment d'ADN/génétique , Syndrome de DiGeorge/génétique , Prédisposition génétique à une maladie , Schizophrénie/génétique , Malformations multiples/épidémiologie , Chromosomes humains de la paire 22/génétique , Syndrome de DiGeorge/épidémiologie , Femelle , Humains , Mâle , Schizophrénie/épidémiologie
4.
Mol Psychiatry ; 17(2): 193-201, 2012 Feb.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21339752

RÉSUMÉ

It is widely thought that alleles that influence susceptibility to common diseases, including schizophrenia, will frequently do so through effects on gene expression. As only a small proportion of the genetic variance for schizophrenia has been attributed to specific loci, this remains an unproven hypothesis. The International Schizophrenia Consortium (ISC) recently reported a substantial polygenic contribution to that disorder, and that schizophrenia risk alleles are enriched among single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) selected for marginal evidence for association (P<0.5) from genome-wide association studies (GWAS). It follows that if schizophrenia susceptibility alleles are enriched for those that affect gene expression, those marginally associated SNPs, which are also expression quantitative trait loci (eQTLs), should carry more true association signals compared with SNPs that are not marginally associated. To test this, we identified marginally associated (P<0.5) SNPs from two of the largest available schizophrenia GWAS data sets. We assigned eQTL status to those SNPs based upon an eQTL data set derived from adult human brain. Using the polygenic score method of analysis reported by the ISC, we observed and replicated the observation that higher probability cis-eQTLs predicted schizophrenia better than those with a lower probability for being a cis-eQTL. Our data support the hypothesis that alleles conferring risk of schizophrenia are enriched among those that affect gene expression. Moreover, our data show that notwithstanding the likely developmental origin of schizophrenia, studies of adult brain tissue can, in principle, allow relevant susceptibility eQTLs to be identified.


Sujet(s)
Prédisposition génétique à une maladie , Variation génétique , Génome humain , Polymorphisme de nucléotide simple/génétique , Schizophrénie/génétique , Allèles , Femelle , Analyse de profil d'expression de gènes , Régulation de l'expression des gènes , Fréquence d'allèle , Étude d'association pangénomique , Génotype , Humains , Modèles logistiques , Mâle , Séquençage par oligonucléotides en batterie , Locus de caractère quantitatif
5.
Mol Psychiatry ; 16(2): 193-201, 2011 Feb.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20125088

RÉSUMÉ

A genome-wide association study was carried out in 1020 case subjects with recurrent early-onset major depressive disorder (MDD) (onset before age 31) and 1636 control subjects screened to exclude lifetime MDD. Subjects were genotyped with the Affymetrix 6.0 platform. After extensive quality control procedures, 671 424 autosomal single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and 25 068 X chromosome SNPs with minor allele frequency greater than 1% were available for analysis. An additional 1 892 186 HapMap II SNPs were analyzed based on imputed genotypic data. Single-SNP logistic regression trend tests were computed, with correction for ancestry-informative principal component scores. No genome-wide significant evidence for association was observed, assuming that nominal P<5 × 10(-8) approximates a 5% genome-wide significance threshold. The strongest evidence for association was observed on chromosome 18q22.1 (rs17077540, P=1.83 × 10(-7)) in a region that has produced some evidence for linkage to bipolar-I or -II disorder in several studies, within an mRNA detected in human brain tissue (BC053410) and approximately 75 kb upstream of DSEL. Comparing these results with those of a meta-analysis of three MDD GWAS data sets reported in a companion article, we note that among the strongest signals observed in the GenRED sample, the meta-analysis provided the greatest support (although not at a genome-wide significant level) for association of MDD to SNPs within SP4, a brain-specific transcription factor. Larger samples will be required to confirm the hypothesis of association between MDD (and particularly the recurrent early-onset subtype) and common SNPs.


Sujet(s)
Trouble dépressif majeur/génétique , Prédisposition génétique à une maladie , Étude d'association pangénomique , Polymorphisme de nucléotide simple/génétique , Adulte , Sujet âgé , Cartographie chromosomique , Europe , Femelle , Fréquence d'allèle , Génotype , Humains , Modèles logistiques , Mâle , Analyse sur microréseau/méthodes , Adulte d'âge moyen , Récidive , Facteurs sexuels , Facteur de transcription Sp4/génétique
6.
Mol Psychiatry ; 16(11): 1117-29, 2011 Nov.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20838396

RÉSUMÉ

We conducted data-mining analyses using the Clinical Antipsychotic Trials of Intervention Effectiveness (CATIE) and molecular genetics of schizophrenia genome-wide association study supported by the genetic association information network (MGS-GAIN) schizophrenia data sets and performed bioinformatic prioritization for all the markers with P-values ≤0.05 in both data sets. In this process, we found that in the CMYA5 gene, there were two non-synonymous markers, rs3828611 and rs10043986, showing nominal significance in both the CATIE and MGS-GAIN samples. In a combined analysis of both the CATIE and MGS-GAIN samples, rs4704591 was identified as the most significant marker in the gene. Linkage disequilibrium analyses indicated that these markers were in low LD (3 828 611-rs10043986, r(2)=0.008; rs10043986-rs4704591, r(2)=0.204). In addition, CMYA5 was reported to be physically interacting with the DTNBP1 gene, a promising candidate for schizophrenia, suggesting that CMYA5 may be involved in the same biological pathway and process. On the basis of this information, we performed replication studies for these three single-nucleotide polymorphisms. The rs3828611 was found to have conflicting results in our Irish samples and was dropped out without further investigation. The other two markers were verified in 23 other independent data sets. In a meta-analysis of all 23 replication samples (family samples, 912 families with 4160 subjects; case-control samples, 11 380 cases and 15 021 controls), we found that both markers are significantly associated with schizophrenia (rs10043986, odds ratio (OR)=1.11, 95% confidence interval (CI)=1.04-1.18, P=8.2 × 10(-4) and rs4704591, OR=1.07, 95% CI=1.03-1.11, P=3.0 × 10(-4)). The results were also significant for the 22 Caucasian replication samples (rs10043986, OR=1.11, 95% CI=1.03-1.17, P=0.0026 and rs4704591, OR=1.07, 95% CI=1.02-1.11, P=0.0015). Furthermore, haplotype conditioned analyses indicated that the association signals observed at these two markers are independent. On the basis of these results, we concluded that CMYA5 is associated with schizophrenia and further investigation of the gene is warranted.


Sujet(s)
Étude d'association pangénomique , Protéines du muscle/génétique , Polymorphisme de nucléotide simple , Schizophrénie/génétique , /génétique , Protéines de transport/génétique , Études cas-témoins , Fouille de données , Dysbindine , Protéines associées à la dystrophine , Allemagne/épidémiologie , Allemagne/ethnologie , Humains , Irlande/épidémiologie , Juif/génétique , Déséquilibre de liaison , Pennsylvanie/épidémiologie , Risque , Schizophrénie/épidémiologie , Schizophrénie/ethnologie , /génétique
7.
Mol Psychiatry ; 16(2): 202-15, 2011 Feb.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20038947

RÉSUMÉ

We report a genome-wide association study (GWAS) of major depressive disorder (MDD) in 1221 cases from the Sequenced Treatment Alternatives to Relieve Depression (STAR*D) study and 1636 screened controls. No genome-wide evidence for association was detected. We also carried out a meta-analysis of three European-ancestry MDD GWAS data sets: STAR*D, Genetics of Recurrent Early-onset Depression and the publicly available Genetic Association Information Network-MDD data set. These data sets, totaling 3957 cases and 3428 controls, were genotyped using four different platforms (Affymetrix 6.0, 5.0 and 500 K, and Perlegen). For each of 2.4 million HapMap II single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), using genotyped data where available and imputed data otherwise, single-SNP association tests were carried out in each sample with correction for ancestry-informative principal components. The strongest evidence for association in the meta-analysis was observed for intronic SNPs in ATP6V1B2 (P=6.78 x 10⁻7), SP4 (P=7.68 x 10⁻7) and GRM7 (P=1.11 x 10⁻6). Additional exploratory analyses were carried out for a narrower phenotype (recurrent MDD with onset before age 31, N=2191 cases), and separately for males and females. Several of the best findings were supported primarily by evidence from narrow cases or from either males or females. On the basis of previous biological evidence, we consider GRM7 a strong MDD candidate gene. Larger samples will be required to determine whether any common SNPs are significantly associated with MDD.


Sujet(s)
Trouble dépressif majeur/génétique , Étude d'association pangénomique , Adolescent , Adulte , Âge de début , Sujet âgé , Europe , Femelle , Analyse de profil d'expression de gènes/méthodes , Génotype , Humains , Mâle , Méta-analyse comme sujet , Adulte d'âge moyen , Séquençage par oligonucléotides en batterie/méthodes , Polymorphisme de nucléotide simple/génétique , Analyse en composantes principales , Récepteurs métabotropes au glutamate/génétique , Facteur de transcription Sp4/génétique , Vacuolar Proton-Translocating ATPases/génétique , Jeune adulte
9.
Mol Psychiatry ; 14(8): 774-85, 2009 Aug.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19349958

RÉSUMÉ

A genome scan meta-analysis (GSMA) was carried out on 32 independent genome-wide linkage scan analyses that included 3255 pedigrees with 7413 genotyped cases affected with schizophrenia (SCZ) or related disorders. The primary GSMA divided the autosomes into 120 bins, rank-ordered the bins within each study according to the most positive linkage result in each bin, summed these ranks (weighted for study size) for each bin across studies and determined the empirical probability of a given summed rank (P(SR)) by simulation. Suggestive evidence for linkage was observed in two single bins, on chromosomes 5q (142-168 Mb) and 2q (103-134 Mb). Genome-wide evidence for linkage was detected on chromosome 2q (119-152 Mb) when bin boundaries were shifted to the middle of the previous bins. The primary analysis met empirical criteria for 'aggregate' genome-wide significance, indicating that some or all of 10 bins are likely to contain loci linked to SCZ, including regions of chromosomes 1, 2q, 3q, 4q, 5q, 8p and 10q. In a secondary analysis of 22 studies of European-ancestry samples, suggestive evidence for linkage was observed on chromosome 8p (16-33 Mb). Although the newer genome-wide association methodology has greater power to detect weak associations to single common DNA sequence variants, linkage analysis can detect diverse genetic effects that segregate in families, including multiple rare variants within one locus or several weakly associated loci in the same region. Therefore, the regions supported by this meta-analysis deserve close attention in future studies.


Sujet(s)
Chromosomes humains/génétique , Liaison génétique , Prédisposition génétique à une maladie , Étude d'association pangénomique , Schizophrénie/génétique , Femelle , Génome humain/génétique , Étude d'association pangénomique/méthodes , Humains , Lod score , Mâle , Pedigree
10.
Mol Psychiatry ; 14(8): 786-95, 2009 Aug.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19223858

RÉSUMÉ

A genomewide linkage scan was carried out in eight clinical samples of informative schizophrenia families. After all quality control checks, the analysis of 707 European-ancestry families included 1615 affected and 1602 unaffected genotyped individuals, and the analysis of all 807 families included 1900 affected and 1839 unaffected individuals. Multipoint linkage analysis with correction for marker-marker linkage disequilibrium was carried out with 5861 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs; Illumina version 4.0 linkage map). Suggestive evidence for linkage (European families) was observed on chromosomes 8p21, 8q24.1, 9q34 and 12q24.1 in nonparametric and/or parametric analyses. In a logistic regression allele-sharing analysis of linkage allowing for intersite heterogeneity, genomewide significant evidence for linkage was observed on chromosome 10p12. Significant heterogeneity was also observed on chromosome 22q11.1. Evidence for linkage across family sets and analyses was most consistent on chromosome 8p21, with a one-LOD support interval that does not include the candidate gene NRG1, suggesting that one or more other susceptibility loci might exist in the region. In this era of genomewide association and deep resequencing studies, consensus linkage regions deserve continued attention, given that linkage signals can be produced by many types of genomic variation, including any combination of multiple common or rare SNPs or copy number variants in a region.


Sujet(s)
Liaison génétique , Prédisposition génétique à une maladie , Étude d'association pangénomique , Schizophrénie/génétique , Chromosomes humains , Génome humain , Humains , Pedigree , Polymorphisme de nucléotide simple
11.
Mol Psychiatry ; 14(1): 30-6, 2009 Jan.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18813210

RÉSUMÉ

We and others have previously reported linkage to schizophrenia on chromosome 10q25-q26 but, to date, a susceptibility gene in the region has not been identified. We examined data from 3606 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) mapping to 10q25-q26 that had been typed in a genome-wide association study (GWAS) of schizophrenia (479 UK cases/2937 controls). SNPs with P<0.01 (n=40) were genotyped in an additional 163 UK cases and those markers that remained nominally significant at P<0.01 (n=22) were genotyped in replication samples from Ireland, Germany and Bulgaria consisting of a total of 1664 cases with schizophrenia and 3541 controls. Only one SNP, rs17101921, was nominally significant after meta-analyses across the replication samples and this was genotyped in an additional six samples from the United States/Australia, Germany, China, Japan, Israel and Sweden (n=5142 cases/6561 controls). Across all replication samples, the allele at rs17101921 that was associated in the GWAS showed evidence for association independent of the original data (OR 1.17 (95% CI 1.06-1.29), P=0.0009). The SNP maps 85 kb from the nearest gene encoding fibroblast growth factor receptor 2 (FGFR2) making this a potential susceptibility gene for schizophrenia.


Sujet(s)
Prédisposition génétique à une maladie , Polymorphisme de nucléotide simple/génétique , Récepteur FGFR2/génétique , Schizophrénie/génétique , Adulte , Sujet âgé , Sujet âgé de 80 ans ou plus , Chromosomes humains de la paire 10 , Femelle , Fréquence d'allèle , Étude d'association pangénomique/méthodes , Génotype , Humains , Déséquilibre de liaison , Mâle , Méta-analyse comme sujet , Adulte d'âge moyen , Jeune adulte
12.
Mol Psychiatry ; 10(4): 353-65, 2005 Apr.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15340358

RÉSUMÉ

Catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) has been implicated in schizophrenia by its function through its roles in monoamine neurotransmitter metabolism and its impact on prefrontal cognition, and also by its position through linkage scans and a strong cytogenetic association. Further support comes from association studies, especially family-based ones examining the COMT variant, Val(108/158)Met. We have studied eight markers spanning COMT and including portions of the two immediately adjacent genes, thioredoxin reductase 2 and armadillo repeat deleted in velocardiofacial syndrome (ARVCF), using association testing in 136 schizophrenia families. We found nominal evidence for association of illness to rs165849 (P=0.051) in ARVCF, and a stronger signal (global P=0.0019-0.0036) from three-marker haplotypes spanning the 3' portions of COMT and ARVCF, including Val(108/158)Met with Val(108/158) being the overtransmitted allele, consistent with previous studies. We also find Val(108/158)Met to be in linkage disequilibrium with the markers in ARVCF. These findings support previous association signals of schizophrenia to COMT markers, and suggest that ARVCF might contribute to this signal. ARVCF, a member of the catenin family, besides being a positional candidate, is also one due to its function, that is, its potential role in neurodevelopment, which is implicated in schizophrenia pathogenesis by several lines of evidence.


Sujet(s)
Catechol O-methyltransferase/génétique , Molécules d'adhérence cellulaire/génétique , Chromosomes humains de la paire 22/génétique , Haplotypes , Phosphoprotéines/génétique , Schizophrénie/génétique , Adulte , Substitution d'acide aminé/génétique , Protéines à domaine armadillo , Cartographie chromosomique , Femelle , Fréquence d'allèle , Marqueurs génétiques , Humains , Déséquilibre de liaison , Mâle , Pedigree , Polymorphisme de nucléotide simple , Schizophrénie/enzymologie , Thioredoxin reductase 2 , Thioredoxin-disulfide reductase/génétique
13.
Mol Psychiatry ; 9(8): 784-95, 2004 Aug.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15007391

RÉSUMÉ

The hypothesis of the existence of one or more schizophrenia susceptibility loci on chromosome 22q is supported by reports of genetic linkage and association, meta-analyses of linkage, and the observation of elevated risk for psychosis in people with velocardiofacial syndrome, caused by 22q11 microdeletions. We tested this hypothesis by evaluating 10 microsatellite markers spanning 22q in a multicenter sample of 779 pedigrees. We also incorporated age at onset and sex into the analysis as covariates. No significant evidence for linkage to schizophrenia or for linkage associated with earlier age at onset, gender, or heterogeneity across sites was observed. We interpret these findings to mean that the population-wide effects of putative 22q schizophrenia susceptibility loci are too weak to detect with linkage analysis even in large samples.


Sujet(s)
Chromosomes humains de la paire 22/génétique , Schizophrénie/génétique , Cartographie chromosomique , Marqueurs génétiques , Prédisposition génétique à une maladie , Humains
14.
Int Rev Psychiatry ; 16(4): 284-93, 2004 Nov.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16194761

RÉSUMÉ

A substantial contribution of genetic factors to the risk of psychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, autism, and drug and alcohol dependence has already been established. However, the familial transmission of these disorders cannot be explained by simple Mendelian models of inheritance, and non-genetic factors must also play a substantial role in their etiologies. Furthermore, the prevalence of any major psychiatric disorder is a great deal higher than that of Mendelian disorders. It has been suggested that evolutionary forces would rapidly eliminate large gene effects, which would suggest that mental disorders, which are highly prevalent, are associated with minor gene effects (Risch, 1994). The current paradigm is that genes with small interacting genetic effects, in conjunction with environmental factors, affect the risk for psychiatric disease. New laboratory and statistical methodology and database tools, and the availability of large clinical samples for the study of linkage and association sustain optimism that genes involved with these diseases will be characterized in the near future. This accomplishment should in turn lead not only to a better understanding of the primary molecular pathophysiology and to more specific and effective therapies, but also to a better understanding of non-genetic risk factors that could be targets for preventive strategies.


Sujet(s)
Génétique du comportement/méthodes , Troubles mentaux/génétique , Allèles , Prédisposition génétique à une maladie , Humains , Pedigree
15.
Mol Psychiatry ; 8(11): 901-10, 2003 Nov.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14593427

RÉSUMÉ

We present evidence of complex balancing regulation of HTR1B transcription by common polymorphisms in its promoter. Computational analysis of the HTR1B gene predicted that a 5' segment, spanning common DNA sequence variations, T-261G, A-161T, and -182INS/DEL-181, contained a putative functional promoter. Using a secreted alkaline phosphatase (SEAP) reporter gene system, we found that the haplotype -261G_-182INS-181_A-161 enhanced transcriptional activity 2.3-fold compared with the haplotype T-261_-182INS-181_A-161. Conversely, -161T reversed this, and the net effect when -261G and -161T were in the same haplotype (-261G_-182INS-181_-161T) was equivalent to the major haplotype (T-261_-182INS-181_A-161). Electrophoretic mobility shift experiments showed that -261G and -161T modify the binding of transcription factors (TFs): -261G generates a new AP2 binding site, while alleles A-161 and -161T exhibit different binding characteristics to AP1. T-261G and A-161T were found to be in linkage disequilibrium (LD) with G861C in a European ancestry population. Interestingly, G861C has been reported to be associated with several psychiatric disorders. Our results indicate that HTR1B is the target of substantial transcriptional genetic regulation by common haplotypes, which are in LD with the HTR1B single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) most commonly used in association studies.


Sujet(s)
Polymorphisme de nucléotide simple , Récepteur de la sérotonine de type 5-HT1B/génétique , Schizophrénie/génétique , Régions 5' non traduites/génétique , Animaux , Cellules CHO , Cricetinae , Expression des gènes , Fréquence d'allèle , Haplotypes , Humains , Déséquilibre de liaison , Oligonucléotides/métabolisme , Régions promotrices (génétique)/génétique , Facteur de transcription AP-1/métabolisme , Activation de la transcription
17.
Genomics ; 72(1): 1-14, 2001 Feb 15.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11247661

RÉSUMÉ

We systematically and comprehensively investigated polymorphisms of the HTR1B gene as well as their linkage disequilibrium and ancestral relationships. We have detected the following polymorphisms in our sample via denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis, database comparisons, and/or previously published assays: G-511T, T-261G, -182INS/DEL-181, A-161T, C129T, T371G, T655C, C705T, G861C, A1099G, G1120A, and A1180G. The results of the intermarker analyses showed strong linkage disequilibrium between the C129T and the G861C polymorphisms and revealed four common haplotypes: ancestral (via chimpanzee comparisons), 129T/861C, -161T, and -182DEL-181. The results of association tests with schizophrenia were negative, although A-161T had a nominal P = 0.04 via ASPEX/sib_tdt. The expressed missense substitutions, Phe124Cys, Phe219Leu, Ile367Val, and Glu374Lys, could potentially affect ligand binding or interaction with G proteins and thus modify drug response in carriers of these variants. On average, the human cSNPs and differences among other primates clustered in the more thermodynamically unstable regions of the mRNA, which suggests that the evolutionary survival of nucleotide sequence variation may be influenced by the mRNA structure of this gene.


Sujet(s)
Variation génétique , Polymorphisme de nucléotide simple , Récepteurs sérotoninergiques/génétique , Allèles , Séquence d'acides aminés , Substitution d'acide aminé , Bases de données factuelles , Électrophorèse , Ethnies/génétique , Évolution moléculaire , Marqueurs génétiques , Haplotypes , Humains , Déséquilibre de liaison , Données de séquences moléculaires , Conformation d'acide nucléique , Polymorphisme de restriction , ARN messager/composition chimique , ARN messager/génétique , /génétique , Récepteur de la sérotonine de type 5-HT1B , Récepteurs sérotoninergiques/composition chimique , Schizophrénie/génétique , Analyse de séquence d'ADN
19.
Am J Med Genet ; 105(8): 789-93, 2001 Dec 08.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11803532

RÉSUMÉ

We have mapped a sample of 68 families consisting of one or more affected sibling pairs with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder with 20 markers spanning all of chromosome 15 to investigate whether there is a locus on chromosome 15 that confers an increased susceptibility to schizophrenia using parametric and nonparametric linkage analyses. Allele sharing identical by descent and multipoint maximum likelihood score (MLS) statistics were employed. Results show excess allele sharing for multiple markers in 15q11.2-q25, a chromosomal region previously found linked to a decrease in the normal inhibition of the P50 auditory-evoked response to the second of paired stimuli, a decrease associated with schizophrenia. Excess allele sharing was found for markers spanning about 48 cM in 15q11.2-q25 (D15S1002-D15S1023). The greatest single point allele sharing was found at D15S659 (62.6%). The multipoint MLS scores were greater than 1.0 in the 30-52 cM interval delimited by ACTC and D15S150, with a maximum value of 2.0 with GENEHUNTER PLUS near D15S1039.


Sujet(s)
Chromosomes humains de la paire 15/génétique , Schizophrénie/génétique , Allèles , Cartographie chromosomique , ADN/génétique , Santé de la famille , Fréquence d'allèle , Liaison génétique , Génotype , Humains , Lod score , Répétitions microsatellites , Schizophrénie/anatomopathologie
20.
Am J Hum Genet ; 67(3): 652-63, 2000 Sep.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10924404

RÉSUMÉ

Schizophrenia candidate regions 33-51 cM in length on chromosomes 5q, 6q, 10p, and 13q were investigated for genetic linkage with mapped markers with an average spacing of 5.64 cM. We studied 734 informative multiplex pedigrees (824 independent affected sibling pairs [ASPs], or 1,003 ASPs when all possible pairs are counted), which were collected in eight centers. Cases with diagnoses of schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder (DSM-IIIR criteria) were considered affected (n=1,937). Data were analyzed with multipoint methods, including nonparametric linkage (NPL), ASP analysis using the possible-triangle method, and logistic-regression analysis of identity-by-descent (IBD) sharing in ASPs with sample as a covariate, in a test for intersample heterogeneity and for linkage with allowance for intersample heterogeneity. The data most supportive for linkage to schizophrenia were from chromosome 6q; logistic-regression analysis of linkage allowing for intersample heterogeneity produced an empirical P value <.0002 with, or P=.0004 without, inclusion of the sample that produced the first positive report in this region; the maximum NPL score in this region was 2.47 (P=.0046), the maximum LOD score (MLS) from ASP analysis was 3.10 (empirical P=.0036), and there was significant evidence for intersample heterogeneity (empirical P=.0038). More-modest support for linkage was observed for chromosome 10p, with logistic-regression analysis of linkage producing an empirical P=. 045 and with significant evidence for intersample heterogeneity (empirical P=.0096).


Sujet(s)
Cartographie chromosomique , Chromosomes humains/génétique , Schizophrénie/génétique , Cartographie chromosomique/statistiques et données numériques , Chromosomes humains de la paire 10/génétique , Chromosomes humains de la paire 13/génétique , Chromosomes humains de la paire 5/génétique , Chromosomes humains de la paire 6/génétique , Bases de données comme sujet , Femelle , Gènes dominants/génétique , Gènes récessifs/génétique , Marqueurs génétiques/génétique , Génotype , Humains , Lod score , Modèles logistiques , Mâle , Analyse appariée , Famille nucléaire , Pedigree , Statistique non paramétrique
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