Smith E N, Bloss C S, Badner J A, Barrett T, Belmonte P L, Berrettini W, Byerley W, Coryell W, Craig D, Edenberg H J, Eskin E, Foroud T, Gershon E, Greenwood T A, Hipolito M, Koller D L, Lawson W B, Liu C, Lohoff F, McInnis M G, McMahon F J, Mirel D B, Murray S S, Nievergelt C, Nurnberger J, Nwulia E A, Paschall J, Potash J B, Rice J, Schulze T G, Scheftner W, Panganiban C, Zaitlen N, Zandi P P, Zöllner S, Schork N J, Kelsoe J R
Scripps Genomic Medicine, Scripps Translational Science Institute, La Jolla, CA, USA.
Mol Psychiatry. 2009 Aug;14(8):755-63. doi: 10.1038/mp.2009.43. Epub 2009 Jun 2.
To identify bipolar disorder (BD) genetic susceptibility factors, we conducted two genome-wide association (GWA) studies: one involving a sample of individuals of European ancestry (EA; n=1001 cases; n=1033 controls), and one involving a sample of individuals of African ancestry (AA; n=345 cases; n=670 controls). For the EA sample, single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) with the strongest statistical evidence for association included rs5907577 in an intergenic region at Xq27.1 (P=1.6 x 10(-6)) and rs10193871 in NAP5 at 2q21.2 (P=9.8 x 10(-6)). For the AA sample, SNPs with the strongest statistical evidence for association included rs2111504 in DPY19L3 at 19q13.11 (P=1.5 x 10(-6)) and rs2769605 in NTRK2 at 9q21.33 (P=4.5 x 10(-5)). We also investigated whether we could provide support for three regions previously associated with BD, and we showed that the ANK3 region replicates in our sample, along with some support for C15Orf53; other evidence implicates BD candidate genes such as SLITRK2. We also tested the hypothesis that BD susceptibility variants exhibit genetic background-dependent effects. SNPs with the strongest statistical evidence for genetic background effects included rs11208285 in ROR1 at 1p31.3 (P=1.4 x 10(-6)), rs4657247 in RGS5 at 1q23.3 (P=4.1 x 10(-6)), and rs7078071 in BTBD16 at 10q26.13 (P=4.5 x 10(-6)). This study is the first to conduct GWA of BD in individuals of AA and suggests that genetic variations that contribute to BD may vary as a function of ancestry.
为了确定双相情感障碍(BD)的遗传易感性因素,我们进行了两项全基因组关联(GWA)研究:一项涉及欧洲血统(EA)个体样本(n = 1001例;n = 1033例对照),另一项涉及非洲血统(AA)个体样本(n = 345例;n = 670例对照)。对于EA样本,具有最强统计学关联证据的单核苷酸多态性(SNP)包括Xq27.1基因间区域的rs5907577(P = 1.6 x 10^(-6))和2q21.2处NAP5中的rs10193871(P = 9.8 x 10^(-6))。对于AA样本,具有最强统计学关联证据的SNP包括19q13.11处DPY19L3中的rs2111504(P = 1.5 x 10^(-6))和9q21.33处NTRK2中的rs2769605(P = 4.5 x 10^(-5))。我们还研究了是否能够为先前与BD相关的三个区域提供支持,结果表明ANK3区域在我们的样本中得到重复验证,同时对C15Orf53也有一定支持;其他证据涉及BD候选基因,如SLITRK2。我们还检验了BD易感性变异表现出遗传背景依赖性效应的假设。具有最强遗传背景效应统计学证据的SNP包括1p31.3处ROR1中的rs11208285(P = 1.4 x 10^(-6))、1q23.3处RGS5中的rs4657247(P = 4.1 x 10^(-6))以及10q26.13处BTBD16中的rs7078071(P = 4.5 x 10^(-6))。本研究首次对AA个体进行BD的GWA研究,并表明导致BD的遗传变异可能因血统而异。