We report on an initial genome screen of 540 individuals from 97 families collected as part of the NIMH Genetics Initiative Bipolar Group. Among the individuals studied, 232 were diagnosed with bipolar (BP) I, 72 with BPII, 88 with major depressive disorderrecurrent type (UPR), and 32 with schizoaff
Genome scan of a second wave of NIMH genetics initiative bipolar pedigrees: chromosomes 2, 11, 13, 14, and X
β Scribed by Zandi, Peter P. ;Willour, Virginia L. ;Huo, Yuqing ;Chellis, Jennifer ;Potash, James B. ;MacKinnon, Dean F. ;Simpson, Sylvia G. ;McMahon, Francis J. ;Gershon, Elliot ;Reich, Theodore ;Foroud, Tatiana ;Nurnberger, John ;DePaulo, J. Raymond ;McInnis, Melvin G.
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 102 KB
- Volume
- 119B
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0148-7299
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
As part of the onβgoing NIMH Genetics Initiative on Bipolar Disorder, we have ascertained 153 multiplex bipolar pedigrees and genotyped them in two waves. We report here the genome scan results for chromosomes 2, 11, 13, 14, and X in the second wave of 56 families. A total of 354 individuals were genotyped and included in the current analyses, including 5 with schizoaffective/bipolar (SA/BP), 139 with bipolar I disorder (BPI), 41 with bipolar II disorder (BPII), and 43 with recurrent unipolar depression (RUP). Linkage analyses were carried out with multiβpoint parametric and nonβparametric affected relative pair methods using three different definitions of the affected phenotype: (model 1) SA/BP and BPI; (model 2) SA/BP, BPI, and BPII; and (model 3) SA/BP, BPI, BPII, and RUP. The best findings were on 11p15.5 (NPLβ=β2.96, Pβ=β0.002) and Xp11.3 (NPLβ=β2.19, Pβ=β0.01). These findings did not reach conventional criteria for significance, but they were located near regions that have been identified in previous genetic studies of bipolar disorder. The relatively modest but consistent findings across studies may suggest that these loci harbor susceptibility genes of modest effect in a subset of families. Large samples such as that being collected by the NIMH Initiative will be necessary to examine the heterogeneity and identify these susceptibility genes. Β© 2003 WileyβLiss, Inc.
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A report on an initial genome screen on 540 individuals in 97 families was collected as part of the NIMH Genetics Initiative on Bipolar Disorder. Families were ascertained to be informative for genetic linkage and underwent a common ascertainment and assessment protocol at four clinical sites. The s
As part of the four-center NIMH Genetics Initiative on Bipolar Disorder we carried out a genomic scan of chromosomes 3, 5, 15, 16,17, and 22. Genotyping was performed on a set of 540 DNAs from 97 families, enriched for affected relative pairs and parents where available. We report here the results o
An initial genome scan was performed on 540 individuals from 97 families segregating bipolar disorder, collected through the National Institutes of Mental Health Genetics Initiative. We report here affected-sib-pair (ASP) data on 126 marker loci (β68,000 genotypes) mapping to chromosomes 4, 7, 9, 18
## Abstract The NIMH genetics initiative on bipolar disorder was established to collect uniformly ascertained bipolar pedigrees for genetic studies. In 1997, the four participating sites published a genome scan on the initial set of 97 bipolar pedigrees. Fiftyβsix additional bipolar pedigrees have