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. 2011 Apr;156B(3):370-8.
doi: 10.1002/ajmg.b.31172. Epub 2011 Feb 8.

Genome-wide association analysis of age at onset and psychotic symptoms in bipolar disorder

Collaborators, Affiliations

Genome-wide association analysis of age at onset and psychotic symptoms in bipolar disorder

Pamela Belmonte Mahon et al. Am J Med Genet B Neuropsychiatr Genet. 2011 Apr.

Erratum in

  • Am J Med Genet B Neuropsychiatr Genet. 2011 Sep;156B(6):749-50

Abstract

Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified several susceptibility loci for bipolar disorder (BP), most notably ANK3. However, most of the inherited risk for BP remains unexplained. One reason for the limited success may be the genetic heterogeneity of BP. Clinical sub-phenotypes of BP may identify more etiologically homogeneous subsets of patients, which can be studied with increased power to detect genetic variation. Here, we report on a mega-analysis of two widely studied sub-phenotypes of BP, age at onset and psychotic symptoms, which are familial and clinically significant. We combined data from three GWAS: NIMH Bipolar Disorder Genetic Association Information Network (GAIN-BP), NIMH Bipolar Disorder Genome Study (BiGS), and a German sample. The combined sample consisted of 2,836 BP cases with information on sub-phenotypes and 2,744 controls. Imputation was performed, resulting in 2.3 million SNPs available for analysis. No SNP reached genome-wide significance for either sub-phenotype. In addition, no SNP reached genome-wide significance in a meta-analysis with an independent replication sample. We had 80% power to detect associations with a common SNP at an OR of 1.6 for psychotic symptoms and a mean difference of 1.8 years in age at onset. Age at onset and psychotic symptoms in BP may be influenced by many genes of smaller effect sizes or other variants not measured well by SNP arrays, such as rare alleles.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Manhattan plot for GWA of age at onset of BP. Genome-wide association results for observed and imputed allelic dosages using linear regression.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Manhattan plot for GWA of psychotic symptoms in BP. Genome-wide association results for observed and imputed allelic dosages using logistic regression in a case-only analysis. Results are for the analysis comparing BP cases with psychotic symptoms to BP cases without psychotic symptoms.

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