4.1 Article

GAD1 single nucleotide polymorphism is in linkage disequilibrium with a child bipolar I disorder phenotype

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MARY ANN LIEBERT INC
DOI: 10.1089/cap.2007.0056

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  1. NIMH NIH HHS [R01 MH 53063, R01 MH 57451, K02 MH 01389] Funding Source: Medline

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Background: Pediatric bipolar I disorder (BP-I) and childhood schizophrenia (SZ) share certain symptoms (e.g., psychosis, aggression/irritability [A/I]), and the psychotic and A/I features are treated with neuroleptics in both disorders. Thus, it is of interest to examine the association of GAD1 to child BP-I because of its recently reported association to childhood SZ. Methods: Child BP-I probands were obtained by consecutive new case ascertainment, and the phenotype was defined as current DSM-IV BP-I (manic or mixed phase) with at least one of the cardinal symptoms of mania (i.e., elation and/or grandiosity) and a Children's Global Assessment Scale score <= 60 (clinical impairment). These child BP-I probands are part of a large, ongoing, longitudinal study in which the phenotype has been validated by unique symptoms, longitudinal stability, and 7-8 times greater family loading than adult BP-I probands. Genotyping was performed using a TaqMan (R) Validated SNP Genotyping Assay, and FBAT was used for analysis. Results: There were 48 families. The rs2241165 A allele was preferentially transmitted (FBAT chi(2) = 5.2, df = 1, p = 0.022). No interaction between this GAD1 SNP and the Va166 BDNF allele was found. Conclusions: These data are consistent with some shared genetic vulnerability between child BP-I and SZ, which may be related to similar treatments.

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