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Genome-wide association study in German patients with attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder
Authors:Hinney Anke  Scherag André  Jarick Ivonne  Albayrak ?zgür  Pütter Carolin  Pechlivanis Sonali  Dauvermann Maria R  Beck Sebastian  Weber Heike  Scherag Susann  Nguyen Trang T  Volckmar Anna-Lena  Knoll Nadja  Faraone Stephen V  Neale Benjamin M  Franke Barbara  Cichon Sven  Hoffmann Per  N?then Markus M  Schreiber Stefan  J?ckel Karl-Heinz  Wichmann H-Erich  Freitag Christine  Lempp Thomas  Meyer Jobst  Gilsbach Susanne  Herpertz-Dahlmann Beate  Sinzig Judith  Lehmkuhl Gerd  Renner Tobias J  Warnke Andreas  Romanos Marcel  Lesch Klaus-Peter  Reif Andreas  Schimmelmann Benno G
Affiliation:Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, University of Duisburg-Essen, Essen, Germany. anke.hinney@uni-due.de
Abstract:The heritability of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is approximately 0.8. Despite several larger scale attempts, genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have not led to the identification of significant results. We performed a GWAS based on 495 German young patients with ADHD (according to DSM-IV criteria; Human660W-Quadv1; Illumina, San Diego, CA) and on 1,300 population-based adult controls (HumanHap550v3; Illumina). Some genes neighboring the single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) with the lowest P-values (best P-value: 8.38 × 10(-7)) have potential relevance for ADHD (e.g., glutamate receptor, metabotropic 5 gene, GRM5). After quality control, the 30 independent SNPs with the lowest P-values (P-values ≤ 7.57 × 10(-5) ) were chosen for confirmation. Genotyping of these SNPs in up to 320 independent German families comprising at least one child with ADHD revealed directionally consistent effect-size point estimates for 19 (10 not consistent) of the SNPs. In silico analyses of the 30 SNPs in the largest meta-analysis so far (2,064 trios, 896 cases, and 2,455 controls) revealed directionally consistent effect-size point estimates for 16 SNPs (11 not consistent). None of the combined analyses revealed a genome-wide significant result. SNPs in previously described autosomal candidate genes did not show significantly lower P-values compared to SNPs within random sets of genes of the same size. We did not find genome-wide significant results in a GWAS of German children with ADHD compared to controls. The second best SNP is located in an intron of GRM5, a gene located within a recently described region with an infrequent copy number variation in patients with ADHD.
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