Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

A Schizophrenia-Susceptibility Locus at 6q25, in One of the World's Largest Reported Pedigrees

2001; Elsevier BV; Volume: 69; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1086/321288

ISSN

1537-6605

Autores

Eva Lindholm, Birgit Ekholm, Sarah H. Shaw, Paula Jalonen, Gunnel Johansson, Ulf Pettersson, Robin Sherrington, Rolf Adolfsson, Elena Jazin,

Tópico(s)

Genetic Mapping and Diversity in Plants and Animals

Resumo

We have completed a genome scan of a 12-generation, 3,400-member pedigree with schizophrenia. Samples from 210 individuals were collected from the pedigree. We performed an "affecteds-only" genome-scan analysis using 43 members of the pedigree. The affected individuals included 29 patients with schizophrenia, 10 with schizoaffective disorders, and 4 with psychosis not otherwise specified. Two sets of white-European allele frequencies were used-one from a Swedish control population (46 unrelated individuals) and one from the pedigree (210 individuals). All analyses pointed to the same region: D6S264, located at 6q25.2, showed a maximum LOD score of 3.45 when allele frequencies in the Swedish control population were used, compared with a maximum LOD score of 2.59 when the pedigree's allele frequencies were used. We analyzed additional markers in the 6q25 region and found a maximum LOD score of 6.6 with marker D6S253, as well as a 6-cM haplotype (markers D6S253-D6S264) that segregated, after 12 generations, with the majority of the affected individuals. Multipoint analysis was performed with the markers in the 6q25 region, and a maximum LOD score of 7.7 was obtained. To evaluate the significance of the genome scan, we simulated the complete analysis under the assumption of no linkage. The results showed that a LOD score >2.2 should be considered as suggestive of linkage, whereas a LOD score >3.7 should be considered as significant. These results suggest that a common ancestral region was inherited by the affected individuals in this large pedigree.

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