| Literature DB >> 23010768 |
S Meier1, M Mattheisen, E Vassos, J Strohmaier, J Treutlein, F Josef, R Breuer, F Degenhardt, T W Mühleisen, B Müller-Myhsok, M Steffens, C Schmael, F J McMahon, M M Nöthen, S Cichon, T G Schulze, M Rietschel, John R Kelsoe, Tiffany A Greenwood, Caroline M Nievergelt, Thomas B Barrett, Rebecca McKinney, Paul D Shilling, Nicholas J Schork, Erin N Smith, Cinnamon S Bloss, John Nurnberger, Howard J Edenberg, Tatiana Foroud, Daniel L Koller, Elliot S Gershon, Chun-Yu Liu, Judith A Badner, William Scheftner, William B Lawson, Evaristus A Nwulia, Maria Hipolito, William Coryell, John Rice, William Byerley, Francis McMahon, David T W Chen, Thomas G Schulze, Wade Berrettini, James B Potash, Peter P Zandi, Pamela B Mahon, Melvin McInnis, David Craig, Szabolcs Szelinger.
Abstract
Research suggests that clinical symptom dimensions may be more useful in delineating the genetics of bipolar disorder (BD) than standard diagnostic models. To date, no study has applied this concept to data from genome-wide association studies (GWAS). We performed a GWAS of factor dimensions in 927 clinically well-characterized BD patients of German ancestry. Rs9875793, which is located in an intergenic region of 3q26.1 and in the vicinity of the solute carrier family 2 (facilitated glucose transporter), member 2 gene (SLC2A2), was significantly associated with the factor analysis-derived dimension 'negative mood delusions' (n=927; P=4.65 × 10(-8), odds ratio (OR)=2.66). This dimension was comprised of the symptoms delusions of poverty, delusions of guilt and nihilistic delusions. In case-control analyses, significant association with the G allele of rs9875793 was only observed in the subgroup of BD patients who displayed symptoms of 'negative mood delusions' (allelic χ(2) model: P(G)=0.0001, OR=1.92; item present, n=89). Further support for the hypothesis that rs9875793 is associated with BD in patients displaying 'negative mood delusions' symptom, such as delusions of guilt, was obtained from an European American sample (GAIN/TGEN), which included 1247 BD patients and 1434 controls (P(EA)=0.028, OR=1.27).Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23010768 PMCID: PMC3565205 DOI: 10.1038/tp.2012.81
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Psychiatry ISSN: 2158-3188 Impact factor: 6.222
Descriptive data for the German bipolar disorder patients
| Investigated individuals | 927 |
| Males | 428 |
| Males (%) | (46.2%) |
| Mean age at recruitment in years (s.d.) | 44.0 (13.59) |
| Mean age of onset in years (s.d.) | 27.7 (11.27) |
Abbreviation: s.d., standard deviation.
Figure 1Quantile–quantile (QQ) plot of the genome-wide association data. QQ plot of allelic χ2 test P values from autosomal SNPs following the application of all quality control filters. Good adherence of data points to the line of expectance was observed. This implies that spurious associations, characterized by an increase in the number of potential highly significant P values, had been systematically removed. All remaining slight deviations from the line of expectance in the extreme tail are presumed to reflect true-positive genetic effects.
Associations between the factor dimension ‘negative mood delusions' and rs9875793 and the seven SLC2A2 SNPs in the German GWAS sample (see Figure 2)
| P | |||||||
| rs9875793 | 3 | A/G | Negative mood delusions | 4.65 × 10−8 | 2.66 | 0.27 | 0.12 |
| rs10513684 | 3 | T/C | Negative mood delusions | NS | 1.06 | 0.04 | 0.04 |
| rs10513685 | 3 | A/G | Negative mood delusions | NS | 0.71 | 0.10 | 0.14 |
| rs1499821 | 3 | A/G | Negative mood delusions | 5.80 × 10−8 | 2.65 | 0.27 | 0.12 |
| rs8192675 | 3 | G/A | Negative mood delusions | 0.0017 | 1.68 | 0.37 | 0.26 |
| rs5400 | 3 | T/C | Negative mood delusions | NS | 0.71 | 0.10 | 0.14 |
| rs11924032 | 3 | A/G | Negative mood delusions | 0.00017 | 1.87 | 0.34 | 0.22 |
Abbreviations: MAF, minor allele frequency; NS, non significant; OR, odds ratio referring to minor allele; SNPs, single-nucleotide polymorphisms.
Alleles, minor/major allele. Minor allele refers to dbSNP build129, and was determined in each analysis in patients with and patients without the trait.
Figure 2Regional-association plots displaying rs9875793 and the SCL2A2 SNPs. Allelic χ2 test P values from SNPs are plotted against positions from the March 2006 human reference sequence, annotated by RefSeq genes. The most highly associated marker from the combined analysis (P) is indicated by an enlarged red diamond, which is in the center of a genomic window of around 300 Mb. The strength of linkage disequilibrium (in r2) between the top SNP and its adjacent markers is demonstrated by the red (high) to white (low) color bar (top right corner).