Suggestive evidence of a locus on chromosome 10p using the NIMH genetics initiative bipolar affective disorder pedigrees

Tatiana Foroud(Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis), Peter Castelluccio(Indiana University School of Medicine), Daniel L. Koller(Indiana University School of Medicine), Howard J. Edenberg(Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis), Marvin J. Miller(Indiana University School of Medicine), Elizabeth S. Bowman(Indiana University School of Medicine), N. Leela Rau(Indiana University School of Medicine), Carrie Smiley(Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis), John P. Rice(Washington University in St. Louis), Alison Goate(Washington University in St. Louis), Christopher M. Armstrong(Washington University in St. Louis), Laura J. Bierut(Washington University in St. Louis), Theodore Reich(Washington University in St. Louis), Sevilla D. Detera‐Wadleigh(National Institutes of Health), Lynn R. Goldin(National Institutes of Health), Judith A. Badner(National Institutes of Health), Juliet J. Guroff(National Institutes of Health), Elliot S. Gershon(National Institute of Mental Health), Francis J. McMahon(Johns Hopkins University), Sylvia G. Simpson(Johns Hopkins University), Dean F. MacKinnon(Johns Hopkins University), Melvin McInnis(Johns Hopkins University), O. Colin Stine(Johns Hopkins University), J. Raymond DePaulo(Johns Hopkins University), Mary C. Blehar(National Institutes of Health), John I. Nürnberger(Indiana University School of Medicine)
American Journal of Medical Genetics
February 7, 2000
Cited by 76

Abstract

As part of a four-center NIMH Genetics Initiative on Bipolar Disorder, a genome screen using 365 markers was performed on 540 DNAs from 97 families, enriched for affected relative pairs. This is the largest uniformly ascertained and assessed linkage sample for this disease, and includes 232 subjects diagnosed with bipolar I (BPI), 32 with schizo-affective, bipolar type (SABP), 72 with bipolar II (BPII), and 88 with unipolar recurrent depression (UPR). A hierarchical set of definitions of affected status was examined. Under Model I, affected individuals were those with a diagnosis of BPI or SABP, Model II included as affected those fitting Model I plus BPII, and Model III included those fitting Model II plus UPR. This data set was previously analyzed using primarily affected sib pair methods. We report the results of nonparametric linkage analyses of the extended pedigree structure using the program Genehunter Plus. The strongest finding was a lod score of 2.5 obtained on chromosome 10 near the marker D10S1423 with diagnosis as defined under Model II. This region has been previously implicated in genome-wide studies of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. Other chromosomal regions with lod scores over 1.50 for at least one Model Included chromosomes 8 (Model III), 16 (Model III), and 20 (Model I). Am. J. Med. Genet. (Neuropsychiatr. Genet.) 96:18-23, 2000


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