1. Major psychiatric disorders and the serotonin transporter gene (SLC6A4): family-based association studies
- Author
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Lyudmila Georgieva, Albena Dimitrova, Ivan Nikolov, Nadejda Poriazova, George Kirov, Michael John Owen, Stefan K. Krastev, and Draga Toncheva
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Proband ,congenital, hereditary, and neonatal diseases and abnormalities ,Candidate gene ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Bipolar Disorder ,Nerve Tissue Proteins ,Minisatellite Repeats ,Genetics ,medicine ,Humans ,Family ,Bipolar disorder ,Allele ,Risk factor ,Bulgaria ,Psychiatry ,Alleles ,Biological Psychiatry ,Genetics (clinical) ,Serotonin transporter ,Serotonin Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins ,Membrane Glycoproteins ,biology ,Genetic Carrier Screening ,Membrane Transport Proteins ,Transmission disequilibrium test ,medicine.disease ,Introns ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Variable number tandem repeat ,Psychotic Disorders ,Schizophrenia ,biology.protein ,Female ,Carrier Proteins - Abstract
The serotonin transporter (5-HTT) is a suitable candidate gene to test for involvement in the pathogenesis of major psychiatric disorders. We used the method of family-based controls to test for association between disease and a variable number tandem repeat (VNTR) in intron 2 of the gene, which has received support for involvement in the pathogenesis of several psychiatric disorders. We analysed 413 proband-parent trios of Bulgarian origin: 266 had a schizophrenic proband, 103 had a bipolar proband and 44 had a schizoaffective proband. The results were analysed using the extended transmission disequilibrium test. Possible effects of different alleles on certain clinical variables were examined by correlation analysis. Three alleles were detected: STin2.9, STin2.10 and STin2.12. None of the three diagnostic samples showed preferential transmission of alleles that reached conventional levels of statistical significance. We could not confirm previous results that STin2.12 allele increases susceptibility to bipolar disorder type I. The rare STin2.9 showed a non-significant trend for preferential transmission in the sample as a whole: 18 transmitted versus 11 non-transmitted (P = 0.2). The VNTR polymorphism in the 5-HTT gene does not appear to be a major risk factor for increasing susceptibility to major psychiatric disorders.
- Published
- 2002