Literature DB >> 15274049

Association analysis of two candidate phospholipase genes that map to the chromosome 15q15.1-15.3 region associated with reading disability.

D W Morris1, D Ivanov, L Robinson, N Williams, J Stevenson, M J Owen, J Williams, M C O'Donovan.   

Abstract

Molecular genetic studies have suggested a reading disability (RD, dyslexia) susceptibility locus on chromosome 15q. We have previously mapped this locus by association to the region surrounding D15S994. Very little is known about the neurobiological processes involved in RD, and therefore selecting positional candidate genes for analysis based upon function is difficult. Nevertheless we were able to identify two functional candidates based upon existing hypotheses. Both were phospholipase genes, phospholipase C beta 2 (PLCB2) and phospholipase A2, group IVB (cytosolic; PLA2G4B). D15S944 is located within PLCB2 and is 1.6 Mb from PLA2G4B. We examined each gene for association using a mixed direct and indirect association approach, a case (n = 164)/control (n = 174) sample, and a partially overlapping sample of 178 RD parent-proband trios from South Wales and England. Mutation analysis revealed 14 sequence variants in PLCB2 and 33 variants in PLA2G4B. All non-synonymous SNPs were genotyped as were SNPs across each gene with maximum distance between SNPs of 6 kb. Case-control analyses revealed modest evidence (0.01 < P < 0.05) for association between a single variant in PLCB2 and two variants in PLA2G4B. However, association was not confirmed in the family based sample. As the latter sample has previously generated replicated significant evidence for association between RD and markers/haplotypes surrounding D15S944, it should have sufficient power to detect association to variants in susceptibility gene itself. We conclude that neither gene accounts for the association signal we previously observed. As these are the only clear cut functional candidate genes in the region, identification of the putative susceptibility locus for RD on 15q will require more methodical non-hypothesis driven positional cloning approaches. Copyright 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15274049     DOI: 10.1002/ajmg.b.30033

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Med Genet B Neuropsychiatr Genet        ISSN: 1552-4841            Impact factor:   3.568


  3 in total

1.  No evidence for association between dyslexia and DYX1C1 functional variants in a group of children and adolescents from Southern Italy.

Authors:  Giulia Bellini; Carmela Bravaccio; Filippo Calamoneri; Maria Donatella Cocuzza; Pasquale Fiorillo; Antonella Gagliano; Domenico Mazzone; Emanuele Miraglia del Giudice; Geoffredo Scuccimarra; Roberto Militerni; Antonio Pascotto
Journal:  J Mol Neurosci       Date:  2005       Impact factor: 3.444

Review 2.  In search of the perfect phenotype: an analysis of linkage and association studies of reading and reading-related processes.

Authors:  Thomas Skiba; Nicole Landi; Richard Wagner; Elena L Grigorenko
Journal:  Behav Genet       Date:  2011-01-19       Impact factor: 2.805

3.  Identifying cancer tissue-of-origin by a novel machine learning method based on expression quantitative trait loci.

Authors:  Yongchang Miao; Xueliang Zhang; Sijie Chen; Wenjing Zhou; Dalai Xu; Xiaoli Shi; Jian Li; Jinhui Tu; Xuelian Yuan; Kebo Lv; Geng Tian
Journal:  Front Oncol       Date:  2022-08-09       Impact factor: 5.738

  3 in total

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