4.7 Article

Genome-wide linkage scan of quantitative traits representing symptom dimensions in multiplex schizophrenia families

Journal

PSYCHIATRY RESEARCH
Volume 210, Issue 3, Pages 756-760

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.psychres.2013.08.015

Keywords

Schizophrenia; Symptom dimensions; Factor analysis; Quantitative traits; Linkage analysis

Categories

Funding

  1. Korea Health 21R&D Project, Ministry for Health, Welfare, and Family Affairs, Republic of Korea [A090096-0911-0000100]
  2. Samsung Biomedical Research Institute [C-B1-135]

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Symptom dimensions of schizophrenia are likely to be the intermediate phenotypes under the control of disease-susceptibility genes, or separate traits related to disease-modifier genes. This study aimed to identify chromosomal loci linked to symptom dimensions of schizophrenia through genome-wide quantitative trait locus (QTL) linkage analysis. The study subjects consisted of 56 families with 183 members including 123 affected individuals. Symptom evaluations were performed on lifetime basis. Through principal component factor analysis, eight quantitative phenotypes representing symptom dimensions were identified. Genotyping was done for 6008 SNP markers, and genome-wide QTL linkage analysis was performed. No symptom dimension showed a significant linkage attaining genome-wide empirical thresholds. We observed seven regions yielding linkage signals attaining genome-wide empirical thresholds for suggestive linkage (NPL Z score=2.78-3.49); chromosome 15q26.1 for 'non-paranoid delusion factor', 2p24.3 and 7q31.1 for 'prodromal impairment factor', 1q32.1, 9p21.3, and 9q31.2 for 'negative symptom factor', and 10p13 for 'disorganization factor'. Among these loci, chromosome 2p24.3 and 1q32.1 overlap with susceptibility loci of schizophrenia identified in our previous linkage studies. This study suggests the existence of genetic lad related to various clinical features of schizophrenia. Further genetic analyses for these dimensional phenotypes are warranted. (c) 2013 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

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