Association between polymorphisms in the metallophosphoesterase (MPPE1) gene and bipolar disorder
β Scribed by Falk W. Lohoff; Thomas N. Ferraro; Edward S. Brodkin; Andrew E. Weller; Paul J. Bloch
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 145 KB
- Volume
- 9999B
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1552-4841
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Genetic linkage studies in bipolar disorder (BPD) suggest that a susceptibility locus exists on chromosome 18p11. The metallophosphoesterase (MPPE1) gene maps to this region. Dysregulation of protein phosphorylation and subsequent abnormal cellular signaling has been postulated to be involved in neuropsychiatric disorders thus making MPPE1 a plausible biological candidate gene for BPD. In this study, we hypothesized that genetic variation in the MPPE1 gene contributes to BPD. We tested this hypothesis by genotyping four SNPs (rs871044; rs3974590; rs593713; rs602201) in BPD patients (nβ=β570) and healthy controls (nβ=β725). Genotypes and allele frequencies were compared between groups using Chi square contingency analysis. Linkage disequilibrium (LD) between markers was calculated and estimated haplotype frequencies were compared between groups. Single marker analysis revealed an association of rs3974590 with BPD (Pβ=β0.009; permutation corrected Pβ=β0.046). Haplotype analysis did not show any significant association with disease after permutation correction. Our results provide evidence of an association between a polymorphism in the MPPE1 gene and BPD. Additional studies are necessary to confirm and elucidate the role of MPPE1 as a susceptibility gene for BPD on chromosome 18p. Β© 2009 WileyβLiss, Inc.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
~ W e have tested the hypothesis that DNA markers in the MAOA gene show allelic association with bipolar affective disorder. Eighty-four unrelated Caucasian patients with DSM 111-R bipolar disorder and 84 Caucasian controls were typed for three markers in MAOA a dinucleotide repeat in intron 2, a VN
## Abstract In the past decade, several chromosomal regions have been analyzed for linkage with bipolar affective disorder (BPAD). There have been conflicting results regarding the involvement of Xβchromosomal regions in harboring susceptibility genes for BPAD. Recently, a new candidate gene (__SYB
A recent case-control study suggested that modest enlargements of a CAG repeat in the hKCa3 potassium channel may be associated with bipolar disorder. We tried to replicate this result in a UK Caucasian sample of 203 DSM-IV bipolar I disorder patients and 206 controls group-matched for age and sex.