Association of a Nonsynonymous Variant of DAOA with Visuospatial Ability in a Bipolar Family Sample
Author(s)
Soronen, Pia; Silander, Kaisa; Antila, Mervi; Palo, Outi M.; Tuulio-Henriksson, Annamari; Kieseppa, Tuula; Ellonen, Pekka; Wedenoja, Juho; Turunen, Joni A.; Pietilainen, Olli P. H.; Hennah, William; Lonnqvist, Jouko; Peltonen, Leena; Partonen, Timo; Paunio, Tiina; ... Show more Show less
DownloadSoronen-2008-Association of a Nonsynonymous Variant of DAOA with Visuospatial Ability in a.pdf (121.7Kb)
PUBLISHER_POLICY
Publisher Policy
Article is made available in accordance with the publisher's policy and may be subject to US copyright law. Please refer to the publisher's site for terms of use.
Terms of use
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Background:
Bipolar disorder and schizophrenia are hypothesized to share some genetic background.
Methods:
In a two-phase study, we evaluated the effect of five promising candidate genes for psychotic disorders, DAOA, COMT, DTNBP1, NRG1, and AKT1, on bipolar spectrum disorder, psychotic disorder, and related cognitive endophenotypes in a Finnish family-based sample ascertained for bipolar disorder.
Results:
In initial screening of 362 individuals from 63 families, we found only marginal evidence for association with the diagnosis-based dichotomous classification. Those associations did not strengthen when we genotyped the complete sample of 723 individuals from 180 families. We observed a significant association of DAOA variants rs3916966 and rs2391191 with visuospatial ability (Quantitative Transmission Disequilibrium Test [QTDT]; p = 4 × 10−6 and 5 × 10−6, respectively) (n = 159) with the two variants in almost complete linkage disequilibrium. The COMT variant rs165599 also associated with visuospatial ability, and in our dataset, we saw an additive effect of DAOA and COMT variants on this neuropsychological trait.
Conclusions:
The ancestral allele (Arg) of the nonsynonymous common DAOA variant rs2391191 (Arg30Lys) was found to predispose to impaired performance. The DAOA gene may play a role in predisposing individuals to a mixed phenotype of psychosis and mania and to impairments in related neuropsychological traits.
Date issued
2008-09Department
Broad Institute of MIT and HarvardJournal
Biological Psychiatry
Publisher
Elsevier B.V.
Citation
Soronen, Pia et al. “Association of a Nonsynonymous Variant of DAOA with Visuospatial Ability in a Bipolar Family Sample.” Biological Psychiatry 64.5 (2008): 438–442. Web.
Version: Final published version
ISSN
0006-3223