Combined Analysis from Eleven Linkage Studies of Bipolar Disorder Provides Strong Evidence of Susceptibility Loci on Chromosomes 6q and 8q

MB McQueen, B Devlin, V Faraone, VL Nimgaonkar, P Sklar, JW Smoller, RA Jamra, M Albus, SA Bacanu, M Baron, TB Barrett, W Berrettini, D Blacker, W Byerley, S Cichon, W Coryell, N Craddock, MJ Daly, JR DePaulo, HJ EdenbergT Foroud, M Gill, TC Gilliam, M Hamshere, I Jones, Lisa Jones, SH Juo, JR Kelsoe, D Lambert, C Lange, B Lerer, J Liu, W Maier, JD MacKinnon, MG McInnis, FJ McMahon, DL Murphy, MM No"then, JI Nurnberger Jr, CN Pato, MT Pato, JB Potash, P Propping, AE Pulver, JP Rice, M Rietschel, W Scheftner, J Schumacher, R Segurado, K van Steen, W Xie, PP Zandi, NM Laird

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticle

    164 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Several independent studies and meta-analyses aimed at identifying genomic regions linked to bipolar disorder (BP) have failed to find clear and consistent evidence of linkage regions. Our hypothesis is that combining the original genotype data provides benefits of increased power and control over sources of heterogeneity that outweigh the difficulty and potential pitfalls of the implementation. We conducted a combined analysis using the original genotype data from 11 BP genomewide linkage scans comprising 5,179 individuals from 1,067 families. Heterogeneity among studies was minimized in our analyses by using uniform methods of analysis and a common, standardized marker map and was assessed using novel methods developed for meta-analysis of genome scans. To date, this collaboration is the largest and most comprehensive analysis of linkage samples involving a psychiatric disorder. We demonstrate that combining original genome-scan data is a powerful approach for the elucidation of linkage regions underlying complex disease. Our results establish genomewide significant linkage to BP on chromosomes 6q and 8q, which provides solid information to guide future gene-finding efforts that rely on fine-mapping and association approaches.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)582-595
    Number of pages14
    JournalAmerican Journal of Human Genetics
    Volume77
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Oct 2005

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