-
Views
-
Cite
Cite
Clyde Francks, Lynn E. DeLisi, Sarah H. Shaw, Simon E. Fisher, Alex J. Richardson, John F. Stein, Anthony P. Monaco, Parent-of-origin effects on handedness and schizophrenia susceptibility on chromosome 2p12–q11, Human Molecular Genetics, Volume 12, Issue 24, 15 December 2003, Pages 3225–3230, https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddg362
- Share Icon Share
Abstract
Schizophrenia and non-right-handedness are moderately associated, and both traits are often accompanied by abnormalities of asymmetrical brain morphology or function. We have found linkage previously of chromosome 2p12–q11 to a quantitative measure of handedness, and we have also found linkage of schizophrenia/schizoaffective disorder to this same chromosomal region in a separate study. Now, we have found that in one of our samples (191 reading-disabled sibling pairs), the relative hand skill of siblings was correlated more strongly with paternal than maternal relative hand skill. This led us to re-analyse 2p12–q11 under parent-of-origin linkage models. We found linkage of relative hand skill in the RD siblings to 2p12–q11 with P=0.0000037 for paternal identity-by-descent sharing, whereas the maternally inherited locus was not linked to the trait (P>0.2). Similarly, in affected-sib-pair analysis of our schizophrenia dataset (241 sibling pairs), we found linkage to schizophrenia for paternal sharing with LOD=4.72, P=0.0000016, within 3 cM of the peak linkage to relative hand skill. Maternal linkage across the region was weak or non-significant. These similar paternal-specific linkages suggest that the causative genetic effects on 2p12–q11 are related. The linkages may be due to a single maternally imprinted influence on lateralized brain development that contains common functional polymorphisms.