| Literature DB >> 20967226 |
Chiara Magri1, Emilio Sacchetti, Michele Traversa, Paolo Valsecchi, Rita Gardella, Cristian Bonvicini, Alessandra Minelli, Massimo Gennarelli, Sergio Barlati.
Abstract
Genome-wide screenings for copy number variations (CNVs) in patients with schizophrenia have demonstrated the presence of several CNVs that increase the risk of developing the disease and a growing number of large rare CNVs; the contribution of these rare CNVs to schizophrenia remains unknown. Using Affymetrix 6.0 arrays, we undertook a systematic search for CNVs in 172 patients with schizophrenia and 160 healthy controls, all of Italian origin, with the aim of confirming previously identified loci and identifying novel schizophrenia susceptibility genes. We found five patients with a CNV occurring in one of the regions most convincingly implicated as risk factors for schizophrenia: NRXN1 and the 16p13.1 regions were found to be deleted in single patients and 15q11.2 in 2 patients, whereas the 15q13.3 region was duplicated in one patient. Furthermore, we found three distinct patients with CNVs in 2q12.2, 3q29 and 17p12 loci, respectively. These loci were previously reported to be deleted or duplicated in patients with schizophrenia but were never formally associated with the disease. We found 5 large CNVs (>900 kb) in 4q32, 5q14.3, 8q23.3, 11q25 and 17q12 in five different patients that could include some new candidate schizophrenia susceptibility genes. In conclusion, the identification of previously reported CNVs and of new, rare, large CNVs further supports a model of schizophrenia that includes the effect of multiple, rare, highly penetrant variants.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20967226 PMCID: PMC2954184 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0013422
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Distribution of CNVs in patients and controlsa.
| No. of Subjects | No. of CNVs | CNVs/person | t-test p-value | No. of Deletions | No. of Duplications | Deletions/Duplications | χ2 p-value | |
| Controls | 160 | 2004 | 12.5±3.7 | 0.31 | 656 | 1348 | 0.49 | 0.09 |
| Patients | 172 | 2189 | 12.7±3.7 | 771 | 1418 | 0.54 | ||
| Total | 332 | 4193 | — | — | 1427 | 2766 | — | — |
Only autosomal CNVs greater than 100 kb, called by at least 25 probes with an average distance between markers of less than 10 kb have been considered.
Figure 1Scatter plot of rare CNV size.
Scatter plot of the distribution of rare CNVs as a function of their dimension in controls and patients. CNVs larger than 900 kb are circled in red.
List of all relevant CNVs found in our samples.
| State | Chr | Cytoband | Start | End | Size (kb) | Loss/Gain | No. Of Markers | Genes |
| Case | 2 | p16.3 | 50,952,424 | 51,280,162 | 328 | Loss | 229 |
|
| Case | 2 | q12.2–q12.3 | 106,232,909 | 107,873,857 | 1641 | Loss | 1013 |
|
| Case | 3 | q29 | 197,185,549 | 198,838,373 | 1653 | Loss | 829 |
|
| Case | 4 | q32.1–q32.2 | 160,885,459 | 163,187,767 | 2302 | Loss | 1583 |
|
| Case | 5 | q14.3 | 83,318,004 | 84,407,494 | 1089 | Loss | 593 |
|
| Case | 8 | q23.3 | 112,965,276 | 115,531,385 | 2566 | Loss | 1417 |
|
| Case | 11 | q25 | 133,461,668 | 134,449,982 | 988 | Loss | 749 |
|
| Case | 15 | q11.2 | 18,700,540 | 20,968,714 | 2268 | Loss | 629 |
|
| Case | 15 | q11.2 | 20,224,752 | 20,777,909 | 553 | Loss | 284 |
|
| Case | 15 | q13.2-q13.3 | 28,280,641 | 30,702,885 | 2422 | Gain | 1160 |
|
| Case | 16 | p13.11 | 15,435,743 | 16,189,809 | 754 | Gain | 494 |
|
| Case | 17 | p12 | 14,039,002 | 15,414,023 | 1375 | Loss | 1109 |
|
| Case | 17 | q12 | 28,983,508 | 29,962,135 | 979 | Gain | 933 |
|
Genome coordinates refer to the NCBI36/hg18 assembly.
Figure 2CNVs at 3q29.
UCSC Genome Browser image of the 3q29 region found deleted in a patient with schizophrenia from this study and in three patients from previous studies [11], [12].
Figure 3CNVs at 2q12.
UCSC Genome Browser image of the 2q12 region found deleted in a patient and duplicated in a control in our study. The same region was previously reported as duplicated in two other patients with schizophrenia [13], [14]. Deletions and duplications are shown in red and blue, respectively.