| Literature DB >> 25284319 |
Cristina Sánchez-Mora1, Josep A Ramos-Quiroga2, Rosa Bosch3, Montse Corrales4, Iris Garcia-Martínez5, Mariana Nogueira4, Mireia Pagerols5, Gloria Palomar4, Vanesa Richarte4, Raquel Vidal4, Alejandro Arias-Vasquez6, Mariona Bustamante7, Joan Forns8, Silke Gross-Lesch9, Monica Guxens8, Anke Hinney10, Martine Hoogman11, Christian Jacob9, Kaya K Jacobsen12, Cornelis C Kan13, Lambertus Kiemeney14, Sarah Kittel-Schneider9, Marieke Klein11, Marten Onnink15, Olga Rivero16, Tetyana Zayats12, Jan Buitelaar17, Stephen V Faraone18, Barbara Franke15, Jan Haavik12, Stefan Johansson12, Klaus-Peter Lesch16, Andreas Reif9, Jordi Sunyer8, Mònica Bayés19, Miguel Casas2, Bru Cormand20, Marta Ribasés1.
Abstract
Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a neurodevelopmental disorder with high heritability. At least 30% of patients diagnosed in childhood continue to suffer from ADHD during adulthood and genetic risk factors may play an essential role in the persistence of the disorder throughout lifespan. To date, genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of ADHD have been completed in seven independent datasets, six of which were pediatric samples and one on persistent ADHD using a DNA-pooling strategy, but none of them reported genome-wide significant associations. In an attempt to unravel novel genes for the persistence of ADHD into adulthood, we conducted the first two-stage GWAS in adults with ADHD. The discovery sample included 607 ADHD cases and 584 controls. Top signals were subsequently tested for replication in three independent follow-up samples of 2104 ADHD patients and 1901 controls. None of the findings exceeded the genome-wide threshold for significance (PGC<5e-08), but we found evidence for the involvement of the FBXO33 (F-box only protein 33) gene in combined ADHD in the discovery sample (P=9.02e-07) and in the joint analysis of both stages (P=9.7e-03). Additional evidence for a FBXO33 role in ADHD was found through gene-wise and pathway enrichment analyses in our genomic study. Risk alleles were associated with lower FBXO33 expression in lymphoblastoid cell lines and with reduced frontal gray matter volume in a sample of 1300 adult subjects. Our findings point for the first time at the ubiquitination machinery as a new disease mechanism for adult ADHD and establish a rationale for searching for additional risk variants in ubiquitination-related genes.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25284319 PMCID: PMC4330505 DOI: 10.1038/npp.2014.267
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychopharmacology ISSN: 0893-133X Impact factor: 7.853