GeneSet Information

Tier III GS219204 • GWAS of irritable vs. elated mania

DESCRIPTION:

Genome-wide association study of irritable vs. elated mania. 117 European ancestry Irritable mania cases, 843 European ancestry Elated mania cases, 1033 European ancestry controls.

LABEL:

GWAS bipolar irritable vs. elated mania

SCORE TYPE:

P-Value

DATE ADDED:

None

DATE UPDATED:

2020-05-06

SPECIES:

AUTHORS:

Greenwood TA, Kelsoe JR

TITLE:

Genome-wide association study of irritable vs. elated mania suggests genetic differences between clinical subtypes of bipolar disorder.

JOURNAL:

PloS one None 2013, Vol 8, pp. e53804

ABSTRACT:

The use of clinical features to define subtypes of a disorder may aid in gene identification for complex diseases. In particular, clinical subtypes of mania may distinguish phenotypic subgroups of bipolar subjects that may also differ genetically. To assess this possibility, we performed a genome-wide association study using genotype data from the Bipolar Genome Study (BiGS) and subjects that were categorized as having either irritable or elated mania during their most severe episode. A bipolar case-only analysis in the GAIN bipolar sample identified several genomic regions that differed between irritable and elated subjects, the most significant of which was for 33 SNPs on chromosome 13q31 (peak pā€Š=ā€Š2Ɨ10(-7)). This broad peak is in a relative gene desert over an unknown EST and between the SLITRK1 and SLITRK6 genes. Evidence for association to this region came predominantly from subjects in the sample that were originally collected as part of a family-based bipolar linkage study, rather than those collected as bipolar singletons. We then genotyped an additional sample of bipolar singleton cases and controls, and the analysis of irritable vs. elated mania in this new sample did not replicate our previous findings. However, this lack of replication is likely due to the presence of significant differences in terms of clinical co-morbity that were identified between these singleton bipolar cases and those that were selected from families segregating the disorder. Despite these clinical differences, analysis of the combined sample provided continued support for 13q31 and other regions from our initial analysis. Though genome-wide significance was not achieved, our results suggest that irritable mania results from a distinct set of genes, including a region on chromosome 13q31. PUBMED: 23326512
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