Options
European Collaborative Study of Early-Onset Bipolar Disorder: Evidence for Genetic Heterogeneity on 2q14 According to Age at Onset
ISSN
1552-4841
Date Issued
2010
Author(s)
Mathieu, Flavie
Dizier, Marie-Helene
Etain, Bruno
Jamain, Stephane
Rietschel, Marcella
Maier, Wolfgang
Albus, Margot
McKeon, Patrick
Roche, Siobhan
Blackwood, Douglas
Muir, Walter J.
Henry, Chantal
Malafosse, Alain
Preisig, Martin
Ferrero, Francois
Cichon, Sven
Ohlraun, Stephanie
Propping, Peter
Abou Jamra, Rami
Zelenica, Diana
Charon, Celine
Marusic, Andrej
Dernovsek, Mojca C.
Gurling, Hugh
Noethen, Markus
Lathrop, Mark
Leboyer, Marion
Bellivier, Frank
DOI
10.1002/ajmg.b.31121
Abstract
Bipolar disorder has a genetic component, but the mode of inheritance remains unclear. A previous genome scan conducted in 70 European families led to detect eight regions linked to bipolar disease. Here, we present an investigation of whether the phenotypic heterogeneity of the disorder corresponds to genetic heterogeneity in these regions using additional markers and an extended sample of families. The MLS statistic was used for linkage analyses. The predivided sample test and the maximum likelihood binomial methods were used to test genetic homogeneity between early-onset bipolar type I (cut-off of 22 years) and other types of the disorder (later onset of bipolar type I and early-onset bipolar type II), using a total of 138 independent bipolar-affected sib-pairs. Analysis of the extended sample of families supports linkage in four regions (2q14, 3p14, 16p23, and 20p12) of the eight regions of linkage suggested by our previous genome scan. Heterogeneity testing revealed genetic heterogeneity between early and late-onset bipolar type I in the 2q14 region (P=0.0001). Only the early form of the bipolar disorder but not the late form appeared to be linked to this region. This region may therefore include a genetic factor either specifically involved in the early-onset bipolar type I or only influencing the age at onset (AAO). Our findings illustrate that stratification according to AAO may be valuable for the identification of genetic vulnerability polymorphisms. (C) 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc.