Published June 18, 2012 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Segment-Wise Genome-Wide Association Analysis Identifies a Candidate Region Associated with Schizophrenia in Three Independent Samples

  • 1. University Medical Center Utrecht
  • 2. Central Institute of Mental Health
  • 3. University of Bonn
  • 4. Georg-August Universität
  • 5. Stanford University
  • 6. National Cancer Institute
  • 7. University of Chicago

Description

Recent studies suggest that variation in complex disorders (e.g., schizophrenia) is explained by a large number of genetic variants with small effect size (Odds Ratio∼1.05–1.1). The statistical power to detect these genetic variants in Genome Wide Association (GWA) studies with large numbers of cases and controls (∼15,000) is still low. As it will be difficult to further increase sample size, we decided to explore an alternative method for analyzing GWA data in a study of schizophrenia, dramatically reducing the number of statistical tests. The underlying hypothesis was that at least some of the genetic variants related to a common outcome are collocated in segments of chromosomes at a wider scale than single genes. Our approach was therefore to study the association between relatively large segments of DNA and disease status. An association test was performed for each SNP and the number of nominally significant tests in a segment was counted. We then performed a permutation-based binomial test to determine whether this region contained significantly more nominally significant SNPs than expected under the null hypothesis of no association, taking linkage into account. Genome Wide Association data of three independent schizophrenia case/control cohorts with European ancestry (Dutch, German, and US) using segments of DNA with variable length (2 to 32 Mbp) was analyzed. Using this approach we identified a region at chromosome 5q23.3-q31.3 (128–160 Mbp) that was significantly enriched with nominally associated SNPs in three independent case-control samples. We conclude that considering relatively wide segments of chromosomes may reveal reliable relationships between the genome and schizophrenia, suggesting novel methodological possibilities as well as raising theoretical questions.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0038828
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:8802

Funding

National Institute of Mental Health
RO1 MHO78075
Foundation for the National Institutes of Health
Genetic Association Information Network
Dutch Health Research Council
10-000-1002
EU
Seventh Framework Programme
German Federal Ministry of Education and Research
01GS08144
German Federal Ministry of Education and Research
01GS08147
Alfried Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach-Stiftung
Netherlands Scientific Organization
451-080-010
Netherlands Scientific Organization
480-05-003

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Psychiatry and Behavioral Neuroscience