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Query: UMLS:C0036341 (
schizophrenia
)
60,220
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A family is reported in which the mother and two sons are carriers of a Y-to-X translocation, der (X)t(X;Y) (
p22
;q11). All the the three carriers have short stature and disproportion of extremities, but otherwise normal phenotype. One of the sons, the propositus, has been affected with
schizophrenia
. Evidence was obtained that male carriers are probable sterile; both sons aged 26 and 30 years had azoospermia and the biopsied specimens of the testis had histologic pictures showing spermatogenetic arrest. The mother was H-Y weakly positive, and the normal X chromosome was inactivated in the majority of the cells analyzed. Dermatoglyphics of the three carriers were unusual and dissimilar to the features of Turner's syndrome. The clinical and cytogenetic findings in the present study are compared with those of the previously reported familial cases, and the genetic background causing phenotypic abnormalities in the male and female carriers is discussed.
...
PMID:Cytogenetic studies in a Y-to-X translocation observed in three members of one family, with evidence of infertility in male carriers. 617 30
Two recent genome-wide searches for linkage (Lasseter et al., 1994; Moises et al., 1995) suggested that a susceptibility gene for
schizophrenia
might be located at chromosome 8p21-
p22
. We attempted to replicate these findings by performing a linkage study of
schizophrenia
with four DNA markers from this region using 25 multiply affected families. Neither the lod score method nor non-prametric extended sib-pair analysis yielded any evidence for linkage, even under the assumption of locus heterogeneity. We conclude that there is unlikely to be a major gene in the 8p21-
p22
region which confers susceptibility to
schizophrenia
in our set of families. However we cannot exclude the possibility of a major gene present in other families, or of a susceptibility gene with a moderate but widespread effect which we cannot detect.
...
PMID:A linkage study of schizophrenia with DNA markers from chromosome 8p21-p22 in 25 multiplex families. 890 91
The present study evaluates evidence for linkage of
schizophrenia
to chromosome 6p24-
p22
. An independent sample of 211 families ascertained on the basis of having an affected sib-pair diagnosed with
schizophrenia
or schizoaffective disorder was assessed with seventeen polymorphic markers spanning a 37cM region. Linkage analysis was performed with parametric and non-parametric methods to test for cosegregation using 4 models of inheritance. Neither two-point nor multipoint non-parametric analyses reached significance at a level less than 0.01 for any markers examined in the region and lod score analyses were not suggestive of linkage. Based on initial findings in the present data set and recently published linkage results, two specific areas were densely covered with markers and tested for linkage disequilibrium. After correcting for multiple comparisons within each locus, no significant deviation from expected allele transmission ratios was observed. The present findings together with the published literature fail to find consistent evidence of a linkage for
schizophrenia
to a single locus on chromosome 6.
...
PMID:Linkage analyses of schizophrenia to chromosome 6p24-p22: an attempt to replicate. 895 Apr 18
Recent reports of a linkage trend in 6p24-22 for
schizophrenia
(SZ), in different samples, were tempered by the concurrent evidence of negative reports in other samples. In the studies showing positive results, different definitions of affection and a wide spectrum of diagnoses were used. Our objectives were not only to test for linkage at 6p24-22 in the Eastern Quebec population, but also to test whether this putative vulnerability locus was either selectively linked to
schizophrenia
(SZ), or to bipolar disorder (BP), or to both major psychoses. Parametric and nonparametric linkage analyses with 12 microsatellite markers in 6p24-
p22
were performed on a sample of 18 large multigenerational pedigrees (N = 354) either affected by SZ, or by BP, or equally affected by both major psychoses (i.e., mixed pedigrees). Three affection definitions were usually tested in our program: one on
schizophrenia
(SZ), one on bipolar disorder (BP), and one that comprised SZ and BP under the hypothesis of a susceptibility locus common to both in major psychoses (common locus, CL). The results of parametric analyses did not support a major gene hypothesis. However, in one large mixed pedigree (#151), we observed with the common locus phenotype (CL) lod scores of 2.49 and 2.15, respectively, at the D6S296 and D6S277 loci under a dominant model. Our data suggest the presence of a potential vulnerability locus at 6p24-22 that could be related to both
schizophrenia
and bipolar affective disorder. These results may be seen as congruent with former studies that used schizoaffective as well as
schizophrenia
diagnoses as entry criteria for the affected families, and used an affection definition that comprised affective psychoses as well as
schizophrenia
.
...
PMID:6p24-22 region and major psychoses in the Eastern Quebec population. Le Groupe IREP. 918 16
The recent advances in the investigation of
schizophrenia
were reviewed. Three major fields are considered relevant: 1. Genetic studies with the remarkable finding of the 6pter-
p22
chromosome linkage study, which will lead to better understanding about inheritance of disease in the future; 2. The new x-ray techniques, including our own investigations showing smaller brain size in our patients, and 3. The prominent new antipsychotic drugs, as effective as the older drugs but with fewer side effects.
...
PMID:[Advances in the investigation of schizophrenia]. 941 Jul 94
In our genomic scan of 265 Irish families with
schizophrenia
, we have thus far generated modest evidence for the presence of vulnerability genes in three chromosomal regions, i.e., 5q21-q31, 6p24-
p22
, and 8p22-p21. Outside of those regions, of all markers tested to date, D10S674 produced one of the highest pairwise heterogeneity lod (H-LOD) scores, 3.2 (P = 0.0004), when initially tested on a subset of 88 families. We then tested a total of 12 markers across a region of 32 centimorgans in region 10p15-p11 of all 265 families. The strongest evidence for linkage occurred assuming an intermediate phenotypic definition, and a recessive genetic model. The largest pairwise H-LOD score was found with marker D10S2443 (maximum 1.95, P = 0.005). Using multipoint H-LODs, we found a broad peak (maximum 1.91, P = 0.006) extending over the 11 centimorgans from marker D10S674 to marker D10S1426. Multipoint nonparametric linkage analysis produced a much broader peak, but with the maximum in the same location near D10S2443 (maximum z = 1.88, P = 0.03). Based on estimates from the multipoint analysis, this putative vulnerability locus appears to be segregating in 5-15% of the families studied, but this estimate should be viewed with caution. When evaluated in the context of our genome scan results, the evidence suggests the possibility of a fourth vulnerability locus for
schizophrenia
in these Irish families, in region 10p15-p11.
...
PMID:A schizophrenia locus may be located in region 10p15-p11. 967 74
Multiple genetic loci have been implicated in the search for
schizophrenia
susceptibility genes, none having been proven as causal. Genetic heterogeneity is probable in the polygenic etiology of
schizophrenia
. We report on two unrelated Caucasian women with paranoid schizophrenia (meeting Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM IV) criteria) who have an Xp22.3 overlapping deletion characterized by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). Patient 1 was previously reported by us (Wyandt HE, Bugeau-Michaud L, Skare JC, Milunsky A. Partial duplication of Xp: a case report and review of previously reported cases. Amer J Med Genet 1991: 40: 280-283) to have a de novo partial duplication of Xp. At that time, she was a 24-year-old woman with short stature, irregular menses, other abnormalities suggestive of Turner syndrome, and paranoid schizophrenia. Recently, FISH analysis demonstrated that she has an inverted duplication (X)(
p22
.1p11.2) and a microscopic deletion (X)(
p22
.2p22.3) between DXS1233 and DXS7108 spanning approximately 16-18 cM. Patient 2 is a 14-year-old girl with short stature, learning disabilities, and paranoid schizophrenia. High-resolution chromosome analysis revealed a de novo deletion involving Xp22. FISH analysis showed that the deletion (X)(
p22
.2p22.3) spanned 10-12 cM between AFMB290XG5 and DXS1060. Given that deletions of Xp22 are not common events, the occurrence of two unrelated
schizophrenia
patients with an overlapping deletion of this region would be extraordinarily rare. Hence, the deletion within Xp22.3 almost certainly contains a gene involved in the pathogenesis of paranoid schizophrenia.
...
PMID:Schizophrenia susceptibility gene locus at Xp22.3. 1045 Aug 63
Childhood-onset
schizophrenia
(COS) is defined by the development of first psychotic symptoms by age 12. While recruiting patients with COS refractory to conventional treatments for a trial of atypical antipsychotic drugs, we discovered a unique case who has a familial t(1;7)(
p22
;q21) reciprocal translocation and onset of psychosis at age 9. The patient also has symptoms of autistic disorder, which are usually transient before the first psychotic episode among 40-50% of the childhood schizophrenics but has persisted in him even after the remission of psychosis. Cosegregating with the translocation, among the carriers in the family available for the study, are other significant psychopathologies, including alcohol/drug abuse, severe impulsivity, and paranoid personality and language delay. This case may provide a model for understanding the genetic basis of
schizophrenia
or autism. Here we report the progress toward characterization of genomic organization across the translocation breakpoint at 7q21. The polymorphic markers, D7S630/D7S492 and D7S2410/D7S646, immediately flanking the breakpoint, may be useful for further confirming the genetic linkage for
schizophrenia
or autism in this region. Am. J. Med. Genet. (Neuropsychiatr. Genet.) 96:749-753, 2000. Published 2000 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
...
PMID:Childhood-onset schizophrenia/autistic disorder and t(1;7) reciprocal translocation: identification of a BAC contig spanning the translocation breakpoint at 7q21. 1112 Nov 74
Genome searches for identifying susceptibility loci for the same complex disease often give inconclusive or inconsistent results. Genome Search Meta-analysis (GSMA) is an established non-parametric method to identify genetic regions that rank high on average in terms of linkage statistics (e.g., lod scores) across studies. Meta-analysis typically aims not only to obtain average estimates, but also to quantify heterogeneity. However, heterogeneity testing between studies included in GSMA has not been developed yet. Heterogeneity may be produced by differences in study designs, study populations, and chance, and the extent of heterogeneity might influence the conclusions of a meta-analysis. Here, we propose and explore metrics that indicate the extent of heterogeneity for specific loci in GSMA based on Monte Carlo permutation tests. We have also developed software that performs both the GSMA and the heterogeneity testing. To illustrate the concept, the proposed methodology was applied to published data from meta-analyses of rheumatoid arthritis (4 scans) and
schizophrenia
(20 scans). In the first meta-analysis, we identified 11 bins with statistically low heterogeneity and 8 with statistically high heterogeneity. The respective numbers were 9 and 6 for the
schizophrenia
meta-analysis. For rheumatoid arthritis, bins 6.2 (the HLA region that is a well-documented susceptibility locus for the disease) and 16.3 (16q12.2-q23.1) had both high average ranks and low between-study heterogeneity. For
schizophrenia
, this was seen for bin 3.2 (3p25.3-
p22
.1) and heterogeneity was still significantly low after adjusting for its high average rank. Concordance was high between the proposed metrics and between weighted and unweighted analyses. Data from genome searches should be synthesized and interpreted considering both average ranks and heterogeneity between studies.
...
PMID:Heterogeneity testing in meta-analysis of genome searches. 1658 3
We characterized a t(1;7)(
p22
;q21) reciprocal translocation in a patient with childhood-onset
schizophrenia
(COS) and autism using genome mapping and sequencing methods. Based on genomic maps of human chromosome 7 and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) studies, we delimited the region of 7q21 harboring the translocation breakpoint to a approximately 16-kb interval. A cosmid containing the translocation-associated 1:7 junction on der(1) was isolated and sequenced, revealing the positions on chromosomes 1 and 7, respectively, where the translocation occurred. PCR-based studies enabled the isolation and sequencing of the reciprocal 7:1 junction on der(7). No currently recognized gene on either chromosome appears to be disrupted by the translocation. We further found no evidence for copy-number differences in the genomic regions flanking the translocation junctions in the patient. Our efforts provide sequence-based information about a
schizophrenia
/autism-associated translocation, and may facilitate future studies investigating the genetic bases of these disorders.
...
PMID:Sequencing and analyzing the t(1;7) reciprocal translocation breakpoints associated with a case of childhood-onset schizophrenia/autistic disorder. 1787 54
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