Psychiatric Genetics

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Psychiatric Genetics:
December 2006 - Volume 16 - Issue 6 - pp 229-230
doi: 10.1097/01.ypg.0000242190.43773.ce
Association Letters

Bipolar 1 disorder is not associated with the RGS4, PRODH, COMT and GRK3 genes

Prata, Diana Pinto; Breen, Gerome; Munro, Janet; Sinclair, Maggie; Osborne, Sarah; Li, Tao; Kerwin, Robert; St. Clair, David; Collier, David A.

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Abstract

Although current psychiatric nosology separates bipolar disorder and schizophrenia into non-overlapping categories, there is growing evidence of a partial aetiological overlap between them from linkage, genetic epidemiology and molecular genetics studies. Thus, it is important to determine whether genes implicated in the aetiology of schizophrenia play a role in bipolar disorder, and vice versa. In this study we investigated a total of 15 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), and all possible haplotypes, of genes that have been previously implicated in schizophrenia or bipolar disorder - RGS4, PRODH, COMT and GRK3 - in a sample of 213 cases with bipolar affective disorder type 1 and 197 controls from Scotland. We analysed the polymorphisms allele-wise, genotype-wise and, for each gene, haplotype-wise but obtained no result that reached nominal significance (p<0.05) for an association with the disease status. In conclusion, we could not find evidence of association between RGS4, PRODH, COMT and GRK3 genes and bipolar affective disorder 1 in the Scottish population.

© 2006 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.

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