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Analysis of Shared Haplotypes amongst Palauans Maps Loci for Psychotic Disorders to 4q28 and 5q23-q31

Authors :
William Byerley
Bernie Devlin
Josepha Tiobech
Lambertus Klei
Victor Yano
Marina Myles-Worsley
Kathryn Roeder
Nadine M. Melhem
Stephen V. Faraone
Youeun Song
Frank A. Middleton
Corneliu A. Bodea
Pearl Marumoto
Source :
Complex Psychiatry. 2:173-184
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
S. Karger AG, 2016.

Abstract

To localize genetic variation affecting risk for psychotic disorders in the population of Palau, we genotyped DNA samples from 203 Palauan individuals diagnosed with psychotic disorders, broadly defined, and 125 control subjects using a genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphism array. Palau has unique features advantageous for this study: due to its population history, Palauans are substantially interrelated; affected individuals often, but not always, cluster in families; and we have essentially complete ascertainment of affected individuals. To localize risk variants to genomic regions, we evaluated long-shared haplotypes, ≥10 Mb, identifying clusters of affected individuals who share such haplotypes. This extensive sharing, typically identical by descent, was significantly greater in cases than population controls, even after controlling for relatedness. Several regions of the genome exhibited substantial excess of shared haplotypes for affected individuals, including 3p21, 3p12, 4q28, and 5q23-q31. Two of these regions, 4q28 and 5q23-q31, showed significant linkage by traditional LOD score analysis and could harbor variants of more sizeable risk for psychosis or a multiplicity of risk variants. The pattern of haplotype sharing in 4q28 highlights PCDH10, encoding a cadherin-related neuronal receptor, as possibly involved in risk.

Details

ISSN :
2673298X and 26733005
Volume :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Complex Psychiatry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6d0721a362643048c04e1debd9cdb231
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1159/000450726