Back to Search Start Over

Failure to confirm genetic association between schizophrenia and markers on chromosome 1q23.3 in the region of the gene encoding the regulator of G-protein signaling 4 protein (RGS4)

Authors :
David Curtis
Jenny Morgan
Graham Lamb
Allison Badacsonyi
Katie Kelly
Bhaskar Punukollu
Jacob Lawrence
Nicholas Bass
Helen Moorey
Gomathinayagam Kandasami
Andrew McQuillin
Hugh Gurling
Digby Quested
Susmita Datta
Mie Rizig
Vinay Puri
Srinivasa Thirumalai
Khalid Choudhury
Jonathan Pimm
Source :
BASE-Bielefeld Academic Search Engine
Publication Year :
2006
Publisher :
Wiley, 2006.

Abstract

The chromosome 1q23.3 region, which includes the RGS4 gene has been implicated in genetic susceptibility to schizophrenia by two linkage studies with lod scores of 6.35 and 3.20 and with positive lod between 2.00 and 3.00 scores in several other studies. Reduced post mortem RGS4 gene expression in the brain of schizophrenics was reported as well as positive allelic association between markers at the RGS4 gene locus and schizophrenia. We have attempted to replicate the finding of allelic association with schizophrenia in a UK based sample of 450 subjects with schizophrenia and 450 supernormal controls. We genotyped the same SNP marker alleles investigated in the earlier studies and also a di-nucleotide (GT)(14) repeat microsatellite marker, which was 7 kb distal to RGS4. In the new UK sample there was no evidence for allelic or haplotypic association between RGS4 markers and schizophrenia. This might reflect genetic heterogeneity between the population samples, genotyping or other methodological problems. The finding weakens the evidence that mutations or variation in the RGS4 gene have an effect on schizophrenia susceptibility. (c) 2006 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

Details

ISSN :
1552485X and 15524841
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American Journal of Medical Genetics Part B: Neuropsychiatric Genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1adb0c6fe426ad8178105fe9cf5a2e4d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ajmg.b.30288