| Literature DB >> 19546859 |
J Elia1, X Gai, H M Xie, J C Perin, E Geiger, J T Glessner, M D'arcy, R deBerardinis, E Frackelton, C Kim, F Lantieri, B M Muganga, L Wang, T Takeda, E F Rappaport, S F A Grant, W Berrettini, M Devoto, T H Shaikh, H Hakonarson, P S White.
Abstract
Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a common and highly heritable disorder, but specific genetic factors underlying risk remain elusive. To assess the role of structural variation in ADHD, we identified 222 inherited copy number variations (CNVs) within 335 ADHD patients and their parents that were not detected in 2026 unrelated healthy individuals. Although no excess CNVs, either deletions or duplications, were found in the ADHD cohort relative to controls, the inherited rare CNV-associated gene set was significantly enriched for genes reported as candidates in studies of autism, schizophrenia and Tourette syndrome, including A2BP1, AUTS2, CNTNAP2 and IMMP2L. The ADHD CNV gene set was also significantly enriched for genes known to be important for psychological and neurological functions, including learning, behavior, synaptic transmission and central nervous system development. Four independent deletions were located within the protein tyrosine phosphatase gene, PTPRD, recently implicated as a candidate gene for restless legs syndrome, which frequently presents with ADHD. A deletion within the glutamate receptor gene, GRM5, was found in an affected parent and all three affected offspring whose ADHD phenotypes closely resembled those of the GRM5 null mouse. Together, these results suggest that rare inherited structural variations play an important role in ADHD development and indicate a set of putative candidate genes for further study in the etiology of ADHD.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19546859 PMCID: PMC2877197 DOI: 10.1038/mp.2009.57
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Psychiatry ISSN: 1359-4184 Impact factor: 15.992
Enrichment of ADHD CNV genes in autism and schizophrenia candidate genes
| FABLE | Autism | 1003 | 10 | 1.14 | 0.127 |
| FABLE | Schizophrenia | 2516 | 29 | 13.19 | < |
| FABLE | Autism OR schizophrenia | 2857 | 32 | 11.66 | < |
| FABLE | Autism AND CNVa | 438 | 6 | 13.35 | < |
| FABLE | Schizophrenia AND CNVa | 998 | 11 | 5.73 | < |
| FABLE | Autism OR schizophrenia AND CNVa | 1259 | 16 | 14.81 | < |
| HuGE navigator | Autistic disorder | 111 | 1 | INSb | INSb |
| HuGE navigator | Schizophrenia | 505 | 9 | 24.82 | < |
| HuGE navigator | Autistic disorder OR schizophrenia | 561 | 9 | 20.46 | < |
| AutDB | All genes | 137 | 5 | 42.25 | < |
| SchizophreniaGene | All genes | 762 | 10 | 12.93 | <0.001 |
Abbreviations: ADHD, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder; CNV, copy number variation.
Query terms representing the concept of CNV: (genetics OR genomics) AND (‘structural variation' OR ‘copy number' OR association OR deletion OR duplication OR translocation).
INS, insufficient sample size to determine significance.
Genes in ADHD CNVs previously associated with neuropsychiatric and neurological disorders
| (15, 21, 55, 56) | ||
| Schizophrenia | (57) | |
| Ataxia-telangiectasia; neurodegeneration | (58, 59) | |
| (60–62) | ||
| Alzheimer's disease | (63) | |
| Schizophrenia | (64) | |
| Schizophrenia | (65) | |
| (17, 58, 66–68) | ||
| Schizophrenia | (69) | |
| Mental retardation in cri du chat syndrome | (70) | |
| (21) | ||
| Schizophrenia; Fragile X syndrome | (71, 72) | |
| (19) | ||
| Autism; | (73–76) | |
| (21) | ||
| (21) | ||
| Cerebral cavernous malformations | (77) | |
| Restless legs syndrome | (33) | |
| Schizophrenia | (78) | |
| Schizophrenia | (79) | |
| Schizophrenia | (80, 81) | |
| Schizophrenia | (82) |
Abbreviations: ADHD, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder; CNVs, copy number variations.
Underlined disorders indicate implication through CNV analysis.
References in Table 2 are listed in the Supplementary Materials.
ADHD CNVs within or overlapping genes previously implicated in neuropsychiatric and neurological disorders
| 130_080_3 | 2 | 55088956 | 55239201 | dup | 150246 | 40 | |
| 130_351_3 | 3 | 38411 | 1118424 | dup | 1080014 | 268 | |
| 130_068_3 | 3 | 7183953 | 7197236 | het | 13284 | 10 | |
| 130_237_3 | 3 | 168483422 | 169118601 | dup | 635180 | 91 | |
| 130_083_3 | 4 | 104848417 | 104972885 | dup | 124469 | 25 | |
| 130_231_3 | 5 | 11540585 | 11571704 | het | 31120 | 13 | |
| 130_340_3 | 5 | 42613316 | 42859556 | dup | 246241 | 22 | |
| 130_100_3 | 5 | 175136520 | 175195299 | het | 58780 | 30 | |
| 130_347_3 | 6 | 124379082 | 124526687 | het | 147606 | 41 | |
| 130_213_3 | 6 | 162672945 | 162782313 | het | 109369 | 41 | |
| 130_220_3 | 6 | 162699792 | 162801747 | dup | 101956 | 38 | |
| 130_401_3 | 7 | 28982601 | 29309947 | dup | 327347 | 155 | |
| 130_386_3 | 7 | 69624365 | 69726112 | dup | 101748 | 37 | |
| 130_197_3 | 7 | 110672863 | 110923287 | het | 250425 | 33 | |
| 130_285_3 | 7 | 146179259 | 146237754 | het | 58496 | 12 | |
| 130_249_3 | 7 | 153332837 | 153468471 | het | 135635 | 48 | |
| 130_142_3 | 9 | 9084805 | 9178865 | het | 94061 | 42 | |
| 130_386_3 | 9 | 9168137 | 10067180 | het | 899044 | 317 | |
| 130_087_3 | 9 | 9985938 | 10020458 | het | 34521 | 10 | |
| 130_093_3 | 9 | 10160101 | 10423023 | het | 262923 | 100 | |
| 130_230_3 | 11 | 88269449 | 88351661 | het | 82213 | 11 | |
| 130_243_3 | 11 | 107520009 | 107885084 | dup | 365076 | 30 | |
| 130_358_3 | 16 | 6072599 | 6783832 | dup | 711234 | 398 | |
| 130_089_3 | 16 | 6753260 | 6841514 | het | 88255 | 44 | |
| 130_214_3 | 16 | 7223181 | 7270339 | het | 47159 | 23 | |
| 130_316_3 | 17 | 25613604 | 26191779 | dup | 578176 | 46 | |
| 130_055_3 | 22 | 34870070 | 34916870 | het | 46801 | 23 |
Abbreviations: ADHD, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder; CNVs, copy number variations.
Type of CNV: het, hemizygous deletion; hom, homozygous deletion; dup, duplication.
Gene(s) partially or fully contained within the corresponding CNV. The listed CNV is predicted to overlap one or more exons unless indicated by (intronic), where the CNV is predicted to lie entirely within a single intron of the named gene.
Gene functional categories significantly enriched in ADHD CNVs using ingenuity pathway analysis
| Infectious disease | 7.56 × 10−3 | 2.32 × 10−2 | |
| Genetic disorders | 1.79 × 10−4 | 2.95 × 10−2 | |
| Psychological disorders | 5.28 × 10−4 | 3.08 × 10−2 | |
| Neurological disease | 5.28 × 10−4 | 4.58 × 10−2 | |
| Hematological disease | 1.79 × 10−4 | 4.58 × 10−2 | |
| Embryonic development | 8.82 × 10−4 | 4.98 × 10−2 | |
| Hematological system development and function | 8.82 × 10−4 | 1.55 × 10−2 | |
| Behavior | 1.90 × 10−5 | 2.32 × 10−2 | |
| Renal and urological system development and function | 6.32 × 10−4 | 3.83 × 10−2 | |
| Nervous system development and function | 3.56 × 10−4 | 4.58 × 10−2 | |
Abbreviations: ADHD, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder; CNVs, copy number variations.
Single test P-values.
Multiple test-corrected P-values using the Benjamini–Hochberg correction; only categories reaching a corrected statistical significance of P<0.05 are shown.
Gene functional categories significantly enriched in ADHD CNV deletions using Gene Ontology (GO) analysis
| Learning | 9.20 × 10−5 | 9.48 × 10−3 | |
| Response to organic substance | 4.91 × 10−4 | 1.76 × 10−2 | |
| Lipoprotein metabolic process | 7.16 × 10−4 | 1.76 × 10−2 | |
| Learning and/or memory | 8.24 × 10−4 | 1.76 × 10−2 | |
| Hindbrain development | 8.56 × 10−4 | 1.76 × 10−2 | |
| Cell adhesion | 1.31 × 10−3 | 2.25 × 10−2 |
Abbreviations: ADHD, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder; CNVs, copy number variations.
Single test P-values.
Multiple test-corrected P-values using the Benjamini–Hochberg correction; only categories reaching a corrected statistical significance of P<0.05 are shown.
Figure 1FISH validation of the GRM5 CNV. Metaphase spreads from (a) the non-affected father and (b) an ADHD patient with the deletion hybridized with probes labeled with Spectrum red (red signal) or Spectrum green (green signal). FISH was performed using fosmid W12-2219g4 (red signal) specific for the GRM5 deletion and BAC RP11-697e14, a control probe for the subtelomeric region of chromosome 11q (green signal). A portion of the GRM5 gene, including the 82kb region deleted in this family, is part of a 325kb segmental duplication present in two copies on chromosome 11, one in 11q and the other in 11p. This results in the observation of two red signals for the GRM5 probe in the non-deleted father (a), on both homologs of chromosome 11 indicated by white arrowheads. The annotated GRM5 gene in the reference genome is present on 11q. In the deleted patient (b), the red signal on 11q is missing on one of the two chromosome 11 homologs, because of the deletion within the GRM5 gene, (indicated by a blue arrowhead).