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Uncovering obsessive-compulsive disorder risk genes in a pediatric cohort by high-resolution analysis of copy number variation.

Authors :
Gazzellone MJ
Zarrei M
Burton CL
Walker S
Uddin M
Shaheen SM
Coste J
Rajendram R
Schachter RJ
Colasanto M
Hanna GL
Rosenberg DR
Soreni N
Fitzgerald KD
Marshall CR
Buchanan JA
Merico D
Arnold PD
Scherer SW
Source :
Journal of neurodevelopmental disorders [J Neurodev Disord] 2016 Oct 18; Vol. 8, pp. 36. Date of Electronic Publication: 2016 Oct 18 (Print Publication: 2016).
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Background: Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is a heterogeneous neuropsychiatric condition, thought to have a significant genetic component. When onset occurs in childhood, affected individuals generally exhibit different characteristics from adult-onset OCD, including higher prevalence in males and increased heritability. Since neuropsychiatric conditions are associated with copy number variations (CNVs), we considered their potential role in the etiology of OCD.<br />Methods: We genotyped 307 unrelated pediatric probands with idiopathic OCD (including 174 that were part of complete parent-child trios) and compared their genotypes with those of 3861 population controls, to identify rare CNVs (<0.5 % frequency) of at least 15 kb in size that might contribute to OCD.<br />Results: We uncovered de novo CNVs in 4/174 probands (2.3 %). Our case cohort was enriched for CNVs in genes that encode targets of the fragile X mental retardation protein (nominal p  = 1.85 × 10 <superscript>-03</superscript> ; FDR=0.09), similar to previous findings in autism and schizophrenia. These results also identified deletions or duplications of exons in genes involved in neuronal migration ( ASTN2 ), synapse formation ( NLGN1 and PTPRD ), and postsynaptic scaffolding ( DLGAP1 and DLGAP2 ), which may be relevant to the pathogenesis of OCD. Four cases had CNVs involving known genomic disorder loci (1q21.1-21.2, 15q11.2-q13.1, 16p13.11, and 17p12). Further, we identified BTBD9 as a candidate gene for OCD. We also sequenced exomes of ten "CNV positive" trios and identified in one an additional plausibly relevant mutation: a 13 bp exonic deletion in DRD4 .<br />Conclusions: Our findings suggest that rare CNVs may contribute to the etiology of OCD.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1866-1947
Volume :
8
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of neurodevelopmental disorders
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
27777633
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s11689-016-9170-9