4.8 Article

Genome-wide scan for genes involved in bipolar affective disorder in 70 European families ascertained through a bipolar type I early-onset proband: supportive evidence for linkage at 3p14

Journal

MOLECULAR PSYCHIATRY
Volume 11, Issue 7, Pages 685-694

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/sj.mp.4001815

Keywords

bipolar disorder; age at onset; genome-wide search; linkage

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Preliminary studies suggested that age at onset ( AAO) may help to define homogeneous bipolar affective disorder ( BPAD) subtypes. This candidate symptom approach might be useful to identify vulnerability genes. Thus, the probability of detecting major disease-causing genes might be increased by focusing on families with early-onset BPAD type I probands. This study was conducted as part of the European Collaborative Study of Early Onset BPAD ( France, Germany, Ireland, Scotland, Switzerland, England, Slovenia). We performed a genome-wide search with 384 microsatellite markers using non-parametric linkage analysis in 87 sib-pairs ascertained through an early-onset BPAD type I proband ( AAO of 21 years or below). Nonparametric multipoint analysis suggested eight regions of linkage with P-values < 0.01 ( 2p21, 2q14.3, 3p14, 5q33, 7q36, 10q23, 16q23 and 20p12). The 3p14 region showed the most significant linkage ( genome-wide P- value estimated over 10 000 simulated replicates of 0.015 [ 0.01 - 0.02]). After genome-wide search analysis, we performed additional linkage analyses with increased marker density using markers in four regions suggestive for linkage and having an information contents lower than 75% ( 3p14, 10q23, 16q23 and 20p12). For these regions, the information content improved by about 10%. In chromosome 3, the non-parametric linkage score increased from 3.51 to 3.83. This study is the first to use early-onset bipolar type I probands in an attempt to increase sample homogeneity. These preliminary findings require confirmation in independent panels of families.

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