Stone William S, Faraone Stephen V, Su Jessica, Tarbox Sarah I, Van Eerdewegh Paul, Tsuang Ming T
Harvard Medical School Department of Psychiatry at Massachusetts Mental Health Center, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA.
Am J Med Genet B Neuropsychiatr Genet. 2004 May 15;127B(1):5-10. doi: 10.1002/ajmg.b.20132.
Observations of impaired glucose regulation in schizophrenia are long-standing, although their pathological and etiological significance is uncertain. One approach to the issue that minimizes environmental variables (e.g., medication and diet) is to determine whether genes related to glucose regulation show genetic linkage to schizophrenia. We examined the potential role of glucose metabolism in schizophrenia through a genome scan of affection status in schizophrenia and an empirical method for deriving P-values. Data were utilized from the NIMH Genetics Initiative for Schizophrenia dataset, which comprises a total sample consisting of 71 pedigrees containing 218 nuclear families and 987 individuals. A genome scan with 459 markers spaced at an average of 10 cM intervals was conducted using the linkage analysis program Genehunter separately for European- and African-American groups. Enzymes that regulate glycolysis were identified and the genes regulating these enzymes were located through the Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man (OMIM) website. The focus in this study was on genes located near previously reported schizophrenia susceptibility regions. The genome-wide significance of these genes to schizophrenia was assessed using permutation testing. When results were adjusted for multiple testing within and across ethnic groups, 6-phosphofructo-2-kinase/fructose-2,6-bisphosphatase 2 (PFKFB2; chromosome 1q32.2) achieved genome-wide significance (P = 0.04). In addition, hexokinase 3 (HK3; chromosome 5q35.3) was also suggestive of linkage (P = 0.09). For the European-American sample, PFKFB2 (1q32.2), hexokinase 3 (HK3; 5q35.3), and pyruvate kinase 3 (PK3; chromosome 15q23) achieved significance at the 0.05 level. None of the genes showed significance in the African-American sample. Our results provide further support for the view that genes that regulate glucose metabolism may also influence susceptibility to schizophrenia. More generally, they support the view that relationships between glucose dysregulation and schizophrenia are inherent to the disorder, and are not merely epiphenomena related to medication or other treatment factors.
对精神分裂症患者葡萄糖调节受损的观察由来已久,但其病理和病因学意义尚不确定。尽量减少环境变量(如药物和饮食)影响的一种研究方法是,确定与葡萄糖调节相关的基因是否与精神分裂症存在遗传连锁关系。我们通过对精神分裂症患病状态进行全基因组扫描,并采用一种推导P值的实证方法,研究了葡萄糖代谢在精神分裂症中的潜在作用。数据来自美国国立精神卫生研究所(NIMH)的精神分裂症遗传学倡议数据集,该数据集包含一个总样本,由71个家系组成,其中有218个核心家庭和987名个体。分别针对欧裔美国人和非裔美国人组,使用连锁分析程序Genehunter,对平均间隔为10厘摩(cM)的459个标记进行全基因组扫描。通过在线人类孟德尔遗传(OMIM)网站,鉴定了调节糖酵解的酶,并确定了调控这些酶的基因。本研究重点关注位于先前报道的精神分裂症易感区域附近的基因。使用置换检验评估这些基因对精神分裂症的全基因组显著性。当对种族群体内部和群体间的多重检验结果进行校正后,6-磷酸果糖-2-激酶/果糖-2,6-二磷酸酶2(PFKFB2;染色体1q32.2)达到全基因组显著性(P = 0.04)。此外,己糖激酶3(HK3;染色体5q35.3)也显示出连锁倾向(P = 0.09)。对于欧裔美国人样本,PFKFB2(1q32.2)、己糖激酶3(HK3;5q35.3)和丙酮酸激酶3(PK3;染色体15q23)在0.05水平上具有显著性。在非裔美国人样本中,没有一个基因显示出显著性。我们的研究结果进一步支持了这样一种观点,即调节葡萄糖代谢的基因可能也会影响精神分裂症的易感性。更普遍地说,它们支持了这样一种观点,即葡萄糖调节异常与精神分裂症之间的关系是该疾病所固有的,而不仅仅是与药物治疗或其他治疗因素相关的附带现象。