2014
A Form of the Metabolic Syndrome Associated with Mutations in DYRK1B
Keramati AR, Fathzadeh M, Go GW, Singh R, Choi M, Faramarzi S, Mane S, Kasaei M, Sarajzadeh-Fard K, Hwa J, Kidd KK, Babaee Bigi MA, Malekzadeh R, Hosseinian A, Babaei M, Lifton RP, Mani A. A Form of the Metabolic Syndrome Associated with Mutations in DYRK1B. New England Journal Of Medicine 2014, 370: 1909-1919. PMID: 24827035, PMCID: PMC4069260, DOI: 10.1056/nejmoa1301824.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsKinase-like domainMapping susceptibility genesHistidine 90Disease-causing genesFunctional characterizationDisease genesDYRK1BKey gluconeogenic enzymesGenetic analysisCardiovascular risk traitsWhole-exome sequencingDistinct familiesLinkage analysisSecond mutationPosition 102Susceptibility genesFamily membersLarge familyGenesCausative mutationsUnaffected family membersMutationsFunction activityAffected family membersGluconeogenic enzymes
2012
Genome-wide association study of Tourette's syndrome
Scharf JM, Yu D, Mathews CA, Neale BM, Stewart SE, Fagerness JA, Evans P, Gamazon E, Edlund CK, Service SK, Tikhomirov A, Osiecki L, Illmann C, Pluzhnikov A, Konkashbaev A, Davis LK, Han B, Crane J, Moorjani P, Crenshaw AT, Parkin MA, Reus VI, Lowe TL, Rangel-Lugo M, Chouinard S, Dion Y, Girard S, Cath DC, Smit JH, King RA, Fernandez TV, Leckman JF, Kidd KK, Kidd JR, Pakstis AJ, State MW, Herrera LD, Romero R, Fournier E, Sandor P, Barr CL, Phan N, Gross-Tsur V, Benarroch F, Pollak Y, Budman CL, Bruun RD, Erenberg G, Naarden AL, Lee PC, Weiss N, Kremeyer B, Berrío GB, Campbell DD, Cardona Silgado JC, Ochoa WC, Mesa Restrepo SC, Muller H, Valencia Duarte AV, Lyon GJ, Leppert M, Morgan J, Weiss R, Grados MA, Anderson K, Davarya S, Singer H, Walkup J, Jankovic J, Tischfield JA, Heiman GA, Gilbert DL, Hoekstra PJ, Robertson MM, Kurlan R, Liu C, Gibbs JR, Singleton A, Hardy J, Strengman E, Ophoff R, Wagner M, Moessner R, Mirel D, Posthuma D, Sabatti C, Eskin E, Conti D, Knowles J, Ruiz-Linares A, Rouleau G, Purcell S, Heutink P, Oostra B, McMahon W, Freimer N, Cox N, Pauls D. Genome-wide association study of Tourette's syndrome. Molecular Psychiatry 2012, 18: 721-728. PMID: 22889924, PMCID: PMC3605224, DOI: 10.1038/mp.2012.69.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdolescentAdultAttention Deficit Disorder with HyperactivityCase-Control StudiesChromosomes, Human, Pair 9FemaleFibrillar CollagensGenetic Predisposition to DiseaseGenome-Wide Association StudyGenotypeHumansInternational CooperationMaleMeta-Analysis as TopicObsessive-Compulsive DisorderPolymorphism, Single NucleotideTourette SyndromeWhite PeopleYoung AdultConceptsGenome-wide association studiesFirst genome-wide association studyAssociation studiesTop signalsFull genetic architectureAncestry-matched controlsEuropean ancestry samplesGenetic architectureGWAS dataComplex inheritanceEuropean-derived populationsSusceptibility variantsSusceptibility genesEventual identificationEuropean ancestryCosta RicaChromosome 9q32Familial recurrence rateNorth AmericaComplete understandingAmerican populationCentral ValleyNeuropsychiatric diseasesDevelopmental disordersGenes
1995
An international two–stage genome–wide search for schizophrenia susceptibility genes
Moises H, Yang L, Kristbjarnarson H, Wiese C, Byerley W, Macciardi F, Arolt V, Blackwood D, Liu X, Sjögren B, Aschauer H, Hwu H, Jang K, Livesley W, Kennedy J, Zoega T, Ivarsson O, Bui M, Yu M, Havsteen B, Commenges D, Weissenbach J, Schwinger E, Gottesman I, Pakstis A, Wetterberg L, Kidd K, Helgason T. An international two–stage genome–wide search for schizophrenia susceptibility genes. Nature Genetics 1995, 11: 321-324. PMID: 7581457, DOI: 10.1038/ng1195-321.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsGenome-wide searchChromosome 6pIDDM susceptibility genesModel-free linkage analysisSchizophrenia susceptibility genesFine mappingOligogenic transmissionAssociation studiesLinkage analysisGeographical isolatesLinkage findingsSusceptibility genesGenesLocus heterogeneityLarge pedigreeComplex disorderSecond International Collaborative StudyComplex modesHLA regionMultifactorial disease