Case-control genome-wide association study of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder
Date Issued
2010-01-01
Author(s)
Neale, Benjamin M.
Medland, Sarah
Ripke, Stephan
Anney, Richard J. L.
Asherson, Philip
Buitelaar, Jan
Franke, Barbara
Gill, Michael
Kent, Lindsey
Holmans, Peter
Middleton, Frank
Thapar, Anita
Lesch, Klaus-Peter
Faraone, Stephen V.
Daly, Mark
Nguyen, Thuy Trang
Schäfer, Helmut
Reif, Andreas
Renner, Tobias J.
Romanos, Marcel
Romanos, Jasmin
Warnke, Andreas
Walitza, Susanne
Freitag, Christine
Meyer, Jobst
Palmason, Haukur
Rothenberger, Aribert
Hawi, Ziarih
Sergeant, Joseph
Roeyers, Herbert
Mick, Eric
Biederman, Joseph
Image, II Consortium Group
DOI
10.1016/j.jaac.2010.06.007
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Although twin and family studies have shown attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) to be highly heritable, genetic variants influencing the trait at a genome-wide significant level have yet to be identified. Thus additional genomewide association studies (GWAS) are needed. METHOD: We used case-control analyses of 896 cases with DSM-IV ADHD genotyped using the Affymetrix 5.0 array and 2,455 repository controls screened for psychotic and bipolar symptoms genotyped using Affymetrix 6.0 arrays. A consensus SNP set was imputed using BEAGLE 3.0, resulting in an analysis dataset of 1,033,244 SNPs. Data were analyzed using a generalized linear model. RESULTS: No genome-wide significant associations were found. The most significant results implicated the following genes: PRKG1, FLNC, TCERG1L, PPM1H, NXPH1, PPM1H, CDH13, HK1, and HKDC1. CONCLUSIONS: The current analyses are a useful addition to the present literature and will make a valuable contribution to future meta-analyses. The candidate gene findings are consistent with a prior meta-analysis in suggesting that the effects of ADHD risk variants must, individually, be very small and/or include multiple rare alleles.