Genome‐wide search for schizophrenia susceptibility loci: The NIMH genetics initiative and millennium consortium

CR Cloninger, CA Kaufmann… - American journal of …, 1998 - Wiley Online Library
American journal of medical genetics, 1998Wiley Online Library
Schizophrenia has a complex pattern of inheritance, indicative of interactions among
multiple genes and environmental factors. The detection and replication of specific
susceptibility loci for such complex disorders are facilitated by the availability of large
samples of affected sib pairs and their nuclear families, along with standardized assessment
and systematic ascertainment procedures. The NIMH Genetics Initiative on Schizophrenia, a
multisite collaborative study, was established as a national resource with a centralized …
Abstract
Schizophrenia has a complex pattern of inheritance, indicative of interactions among multiple genes and environmental factors. The detection and replication of specific susceptibility loci for such complex disorders are facilitated by the availability of large samples of affected sib pairs and their nuclear families, along with standardized assessment and systematic ascertainment procedures. The NIMH Genetics Initiative on Schizophrenia, a multisite collaborative study, was established as a national resource with a centralized clinical data base and cell repository. The Millennium Schizophrenia Consortium has completed a genome‐wide scan to detect susceptibility loci for schizophrenia in 244 individuals from the nuclear families of 92 independent pairs of schizophrenic sibs ascertained by the NIMH Genetics Initiative. The 459 marker loci used in the scan were spaced at 10‐cM intervals on average. Individuals of African descent were higher than those of European descent in their average heterozygosity (79% vs. 76%, P < .0001) and number of alleles per marker (9.2 vs. 8.4, P < .0001). Also, the allele frequencies of 73% of the marker loci differed significantly (P < .01) between individuals of European and African ancestry. However, regardless of ethnic background, this sample was largely comprised of schizophrenics with more than a decade of psychosis associated with pervasive social and occupational impairment. Am. J. Med. Genet. (Neuropsychiatr. Genet.) 81:275–281, 1998. © 1998 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
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