Back to Search Start Over

Genome-wide analysis of copy number variants in attention deficit hyperactivity disorder: the role of rare variants and duplications at 15q13.3.

Authors :
Williams NM
Franke B
Mick E
Anney RJ
Freitag CM
Gill M
Thapar A
O'Donovan MC
Owen MJ
Holmans P
Kent L
Middleton F
Zhang-James Y
Liu L
Meyer J
Nguyen TT
Romanos J
Romanos M
Seitz C
Renner TJ
Walitza S
Warnke A
Palmason H
Buitelaar J
Rommelse N
Vasquez AA
Hawi Z
Langley K
Sergeant J
Steinhausen HC
Roeyers H
Biederman J
Zaharieva I
Hakonarson H
Elia J
Lionel AC
Crosbie J
Marshall CR
Schachar R
Scherer SW
Todorov A
Smalley SL
Loo S
Nelson S
Shtir C
Asherson P
Reif A
Lesch KP
Faraone SV
Source :
The American journal of psychiatry [Am J Psychiatry] 2012 Feb; Vol. 169 (2), pp. 195-204.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Objective: Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a common, highly heritable psychiatric disorder. Because of its multifactorial etiology, however, identifying the genes involved has been difficult. The authors followed up on recent findings suggesting that rare copy number variants (CNVs) may be important for ADHD etiology.<br />Method: The authors performed a genome-wide analysis of large, rare CNVs (<1% population frequency) in children with ADHD (N=896) and comparison subjects (N=2,455) from the IMAGE II Consortium.<br />Results: The authors observed 1,562 individually rare CNVs >100 kb in size, which segregated into 912 independent loci. Overall, the rate of rare CNVs >100 kb was 1.15 times higher in ADHD case subjects relative to comparison subjects, with duplications spanning known genes showing a 1.2-fold enrichment. In accordance with a previous study, rare CNVs >500 kb showed the greatest enrichment (1.28-fold). CNVs identified in ADHD case subjects were significantly enriched for loci implicated in autism and in schizophrenia. Duplications spanning the CHRNA7 gene at chromosome 15q13.3 were associated with ADHD in single-locus analysis. This finding was consistently replicated in an additional 2,242 ADHD case subjects and 8,552 comparison subjects from four independent cohorts from the United Kingdom, the United States, and Canada. Presence of the duplication at 15q13.3 appeared to be associated with comorbid conduct disorder.<br />Conclusions: These findings support the enrichment of large, rare CNVs in ADHD and implicate duplications at 15q13.3 as a novel risk factor for ADHD. With a frequency of 0.6% in the populations investigated and a relatively large effect size (odds ratio=2.22, 95% confidence interval=1.5–3.6), this locus could be an important contributor to ADHD etiology.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1535-7228
Volume :
169
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The American journal of psychiatry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
22420048
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1176/appi.ajp.2011.11060822