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Family‐based and case–control study of catechol‐ O ‐methyltransferase in schizophrenia among Palestinian Arabs
Author(s) -
Kremer I.,
Pinto M.,
Murad I.,
Muhaheed M.,
Bannoura I.,
Muller D.J.,
Schulze T.G.,
Reshef A.,
Blanaru M.,
Gathas S.,
Goichman R.,
Rietschel M.,
Dobrusin M.,
BachnerMelman R.,
Nemanov L.,
Belmaker R.H.,
Maier W.,
Ebstein R.P.
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
american journal of medical genetics part b: neuropsychiatric genetics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.393
H-Index - 126
eISSN - 1552-485X
pISSN - 1552-4841
DOI - 10.1002/ajmg.b.20008
Subject(s) - catechol o methyl transferase , allele , schizophrenia (object oriented programming) , genetics , valine , psychology , psychosis , endophenotype , polymorphism (computer science) , medicine , psychiatry , clinical psychology , biology , gene , cognition , amino acid
COMT is a ubiquitous enzyme crucial to catechol metabolism. The molecular basis of COMT thermolability, that leads to three to fourfold differences in enzyme activity, is due to a substitution of valine with methionine in the Val158/108Met polymorphism. Of special interest is the role of this gene in major psychoses especially since a microdeletion (22q11) containing the COMT gene (velo‐cardio‐facial syndrome) also carries with it several types of behavioral disorders, including an increased prevalence of schizophrenia. Almost 20 genetic studies have examined the role of COMT in schizophrenia with ambiguous results. Towards clarifying the role of this polymorphism in conferring risk for psychosis, we examined a large group of culturally and ethnically akin Palestinian Arab schizophrenic triads (N = 276) using both a case–control and family‐based study. In 194 informative triads with at least one heterozygote parent, no preferential transmission of either COMT allele was observed in this sample (TDT statistic chi‐square = 0.14 NS; 131 COMT valine alleles were transmitted and 125 alleles not transmitted). However, using a case–control design a significant increase (Likelihood ratio = 3.935, P  = 0.047) in the valine allele was observed in the group of schizophrenic patients (N = 276) compared to an ethnically matched control group (N = 77). The association was stronger in female patients ( P  = 0.012) similar to other studies showing that some COMT behavioral effects are gender sensitive. In summary, by case–control design but not by a family‐based study, there is a weak effect in female patients of the high activity COMT allele in conferring risk for schizophrenia. © 2003 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.

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