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. 2011 Dec 15;70(12):1115-21.
doi: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2011.08.009. Epub 2011 Oct 7.

Copy number variants for schizophrenia and related psychotic disorders in Oceanic Palau: risk and transmission in extended pedigrees

Affiliations

Copy number variants for schizophrenia and related psychotic disorders in Oceanic Palau: risk and transmission in extended pedigrees

Nadine Melhem et al. Biol Psychiatry. .

Abstract

Background: We report on copy number variants (CNVs) found in Palauan subjects ascertained for schizophrenia and related psychotic disorders in extended pedigrees in Palau. We compare CNVs found in this Oceanic population with those seen in other samples, typically of European ancestry. Assessing CNVs in Palauan extended pedigrees yields insight into the evolution of risk CNVs, such as how they arise, are transmitted, and are lost from populations by stochastic or selective processes, none of which are easily measured from case-control samples.

Methods: DNA samples from 197 subjects affected with schizophrenia and related psychotic disorders, 185 of their relatives, and 159 control subjects were successfully characterized for CNVs using Affymetrix Genomewide Human SNP Array 5.0.

Results: Copy number variants thought to be associated with risk for schizophrenia and related disorders also occur in affected individuals in Palau, specifically 15q11.2 and 1q21.1 deletions, partial duplication of IL1RAPL1 (Xp21.3), and chromosome X duplications (Klinefelter's syndrome). Partial duplication within A2BP1 appears to convey an eightfold increased risk in male subjects (95% confidence interval, .8-84.4) but not female subjects (odds ratio = .4, 95% confidence interval, .03-4.9). Affected-only linkage analysis using this variant yields a logarithm of the odds score of 3.5.

Conclusions: This study reveals CNVs that confer risk to schizophrenia and related psychotic disorders in Palau, most of which have been previously observed in samples of European ancestry. Only a few of these CNVs show evidence that they have existed for many generations, consistent with risk variants diminishing reproductive success.

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Conflict of interest statement

All other authors report no biomedical financial interests or potential conflicts of interest.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Nominal pedigree relationships between subjects carrying a duplication in A2BP1. Subjects in red are affected; triangle symbol represents unknown gender. Subjects with OC are obligate carriers who were not genotyped to confirm their carrier status. The pedigree section linking 2034, 22554, 22532, and 60038 was inferred from genetic-based estimates of the relationships. Genetic-based estimates uncover additional distant relationships between CNV carriers (Table 2).

Comment in

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