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Common and rare variant analysis in early-onset bipolar disorder vulnerability.

Authors :
Stéphane Jamain
Sven Cichon
Bruno Etain
Thomas W Mühleisen
Alexander Georgi
Nora Zidane
Lucie Chevallier
Jasmine Deshommes
Aude Nicolas
Annabelle Henrion
Franziska Degenhardt
Manuel Mattheisen
Lutz Priebe
Flavie Mathieu
Jean-Pierre Kahn
Chantal Henry
Anne Boland
Diana Zelenika
Ivo Gut
Simon Heath
Mark Lathrop
Wolfgang Maier
Margot Albus
Marcella Rietschel
Thomas G Schulze
Francis J McMahon
John R Kelsoe
Marian Hamshere
Nicholas Craddock
Markus M Nöthen
Frank Bellivier
Marion Leboyer
Source :
PLoS ONE, Vol 9, Iss 8, p e104326 (2014)
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2014.

Abstract

Bipolar disorder is one of the most common and devastating psychiatric disorders whose mechanisms remain largely unknown. Despite a strong genetic contribution demonstrated by twin and adoption studies, a polygenic background influences this multifactorial and heterogeneous psychiatric disorder. To identify susceptibility genes on a severe and more familial sub-form of the disease, we conducted a genome-wide association study focused on 211 patients of French origin with an early age at onset and 1,719 controls, and then replicated our data on a German sample of 159 patients with early-onset bipolar disorder and 998 controls. Replication study and subsequent meta-analysis revealed two genes encoding proteins involved in phosphoinositide signalling pathway (PLEKHA5 and PLCXD3). We performed additional replication studies in two datasets from the WTCCC (764 patients and 2,938 controls) and the GAIN-TGen cohorts (1,524 patients and 1,436 controls) and found nominal P-values both in the PLCXD3 and PLEKHA5 loci with the WTCCC sample. In addition, we identified in the French cohort one affected individual with a deletion at the PLCXD3 locus and another one carrying a missense variation in PLCXD3 (p.R93H), both supporting a role of the phosphatidylinositol pathway in early-onset bipolar disorder vulnerability. Although the current nominally significant findings should be interpreted with caution and need replication in independent cohorts, this study supports the strategy to combine genetic approaches to determine the molecular mechanisms underlying bipolar disorder.

Subjects

Subjects :
Medicine
Science

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
9
Issue :
8
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
PLoS ONE
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.0a21a9615324b178e8eea2ec3cbbf88
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0104326