4.7 Article

Consistently replicating locus linked to migraine on 10q22-q23

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS
Volume 82, Issue 5, Pages 1051-1063

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2008.03.003

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NCRR NIH HHS [U54 RR020278] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIAAA NIH HHS [AA11998, AA07728, P50 AA011998, R01 AA013326, AA013326, R37 AA007728, AA013320, AA014041, R01 AA013320, R01 AA010249, R01 AA014041, R01 AA007535, R01 AA007728] Funding Source: Medline
  3. NINDS NIH HHS [R01 NS037675, R01 NS37675] Funding Source: Medline

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Here, we present the results of two genome-wide scans in two diverse populations in which a consistent use of recently introduced migraine-phenotyping methods detects and replicates a locus on 10q22-q23, with an additional independent replication. No genetic variants have been convincingly established in migraine, and although several loci have been reported, none of them has been consistently replicated. We employed the three known migraine-phenotyping methods (clinical end diagnosis, latent-class analysis, and trait-component analysis) with robust multiple testing correction in a large sample set of 1675 individuals from 210 migraine families from Finland and Australia. Genome-wide multipoint linkage analysis that used the Kong and Cox exponential model in Finns detected a locus on 10q22-q23 with highly significant evidence of linkage (LOD 7.68 at 103 cM in female-specific analysis). The Australian sample showed a LOD score of 3.50 at the same locus (100 cM), as did the independent Finnish replication study (LOD score 2.41, at 102 cM). In addition, four previously reported loci on 8q21, 14q21, 18q12, and Xp21 were also replicated. A shared-segment analysis of 10q22-q23 linked Finnish families identified a 1.6-9.5 cM segment, centered on 101 cM, which shows in-family homology in 95% of affected Finns. This region was further studied with 1323 SNPs. Although no significant association was observed, four regions warranting follow-up studies were identified. These results support the use of symptomology-based phenotyping in migraine and suggest that the 10q22-q23 locus probably contains one or more migraine susceptibility variants.

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