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No significant association of 14 candidate genes with schizophrenia in a large European ancestry sample: implications for psychiatric genetics
Authors:Sanders Alan R  Duan Jubao  Levinson Douglas F  Shi Jianxin  He Deli  Hou Cuiping  Burrell Gregory J  Rice John P  Nertney Deborah A  Olincy Ann  Rozic Pablo  Vinogradov Sophia  Buccola Nancy G  Mowry Bryan J  Freedman Robert  Amin Farooq  Black Donald W  Silverman Jeremy M  Byerley William F  Crowe Raymond R  Cloninger C Robert  Martinez Maria  Gejman Pablo V
Affiliation:Department of Psychiatry and Behavioural Sciences, Evanston Northwestern Healthcare Research Institute, Evanston, IL 60201-3137, USA.
Abstract:OBJECTIVE: The authors carried out a genetic association study of 14 schizophrenia candidate genes (RGS4, DISC1, DTNBP1, STX7, TAAR6, PPP3CC, NRG1, DRD2, HTR2A, DAOA, AKT1, CHRNA7, COMT, and ARVCF). This study tested the hypothesis of association of schizophrenia with common single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in these genes using the largest sample to date that has been collected with uniform clinical methods and the most comprehensive set of SNPs in each gene. METHOD: The sample included 1,870 cases (schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder) and 2,002 screened comparison subjects (i.e. controls), all of European ancestry, with ancestral outliers excluded based on analysis of ancestry-informative markers. The authors genotyped 789 SNPs, including tags for most common SNPs in each gene, SNPs previously reported as associated, and SNPs located in functional domains of genes such as promoters, coding exons (including nonsynonymous SNPs), 3' untranslated regions, and conserved noncoding sequences. After extensive data cleaning, 648 SNPs were analyzed for association of single SNPs and of haplotypes. RESULTS: Neither experiment-wide nor gene-wide statistical significance was observed in the primary single-SNP analyses or in secondary analyses of haplotypes or of imputed genotypes for additional common HapMap SNPs. Results in SNPs previously reported as associated with schizophrenia were consistent with chance expectation, and four functional polymorphisms in COMT, DRD2, and HTR2A did not produce nominally significant evidence to support previous evidence for association. CONCLUSIONS: It is unlikely that common SNPs in these genes account for a substantial proportion of the genetic risk for schizophrenia, although small effects cannot be ruled out.
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