| Literature DB >> 20485477 |
Vanessa Nieratschker1, Markus M Nöthen, Marcella Rietschel.
Abstract
Schizophrenia is a highly heritable disorder, but the identification of specific genes has proven to be a difficult endeavor. Genes involved in the dopaminergic system are considered to be major candidates since the "dopamine hypothesis" of impairment in dopaminergic neurotransmission is one of the most widely accepted hypotheses of the etiology of schizophrenia. The overall findings from candidate studies do provide some support for the "dopamine hypothesis." However, results from the first systematic genome-wide association (GWA) studies have implicated variants within ZNF804A, NRGN, TCF4, and variants in the MHC region on chromosome 6p22.1. Although these genes may not immediately impact on dopaminergic neurotransmission, it remains possible that downstream impairments in dopaminergic function are caused. Furthermore, only a very small fraction of all truly associated genetic variants have been detected and many more associated variants will be identified in the future by GWA studies and alternative approaches. The results of these studies may allow a more comprehensive re-evaluation of the dopamine hypothesis.Entities:
Keywords: CNV; candidate gene; dopamine hypothesis; genetic variants; genome-wide association study; heritability; linkage study; schizophrenia
Year: 2010 PMID: 20485477 PMCID: PMC2871716 DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2010.00023
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Behav Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5153 Impact factor: 3.558
Figure 1Linkage analyses have proven to be successful in identifying genetic variants underlying monogenic disorders caused by rare variants with large effects. Association studies aim to detect common variants that make only a small contribution to the disorder. The detection of rare variants with only small phenotypic effects is difficult since sequencing of large numbers of patients and controls is necessary and (prohibitively) large samples sizes are required for association testing (adapted from McCarthy et al., 2008). *SNPs with a minor allele frequency <1% are typically not included in arrays used for genome-wide association studies.
Published genome-wide association studies for schizophrenia: all schizophrenia GWA studies published to date are shown. The number of variants investigated, the best associated SNP(s) found and the gene(s) containing that SNP(s), the corresponding p-value(s) and the number of cases and controls in the discovery and the replication/meta-analysis sample are all given.
| Study | # SNPs analyzed | Supported variant | Supported gene | # Samples discovery | # Samples replication/meta analysis | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mah et al. ( | ∼25,000 | rs752016 | 0.006 | 320 cases, 325 controls | 0.035 | 200 cases, 230 controls (EA) | |
| Lencz et al. ( | ∼500,000 | rs4129148 | 3.7 × 10−7 | 178 cases, 144 controls | |||
| Sullivan et al. ( | ∼500,000 | rs4846033 | 4.4 × 10−6 | 738 cases, 733 controls | |||
| O'Donovan et al. ( | ∼500,000 | rs1344706 | 1.8 × 10−6 | 479 cases, 2937 controls | 1.6 × 10−7 | 7308 cases, 12834 controls | |
| Shifman et al. ( | ∼500,000 | rs7341475 | 2.9 × 10−5 (in females) | 745 cases, 2644 controls | 8.8 × 10−7 in females) | 2274 cases, 4401 controls | |
| Kirov et al. ( | ∼550,000 | rs11064768 | 1.2 × 10−6 | 574 trios | |||
| Need et al. ( | ∼550,000 | rs2135551 | 1.3 × 10−6 | 871 cases, 863 controls | 1460 cases, 12995 controls | ||
| Shi et al. ( | ∼600,000 | rs13025591 | 4.6 × 10−7 (in EA) | 2681 cases, 2653 controls (EA); 1286 cases, 973 controls (AA) | |||
| rs1851196 | 2.1 × 10−6 (in AA) | ||||||
| 8008 cases 19077 controls (EA) | |||||||
| International Schizophrenia Consortium ( | ∼1,000,000 | rs5761163 | 3.4 × 10−7 | 3322 cases, 3587 controls | 8008 cases, 19077 controls | ||
| Stefansson et al. ( | ∼300,000 | 2663 cases, 13498 controls | 12945 cases, 34591 controls | ||||
Genome-wide significant findings are highlighted in bold.
EA, European Ancestry Individuals; AA, African American Individuals.