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Open AccessResearch article

Mutation screening of two candidate genes from 13q32 in families affected with Bipolar disorder: human peptide transporter (SLC15A1) and human glypican5 (GPC5)

Manjula Maheshwari1 email, SL Christian2 email, C Liu2 email, JA Badner2 email, S Detera-Wadleigh3 email, ES Gershon2 email and Richard A Gibbs1 email

1Department of Molecular & Human Genetics, Human Genome Sequencing Center, One Baylor Plaza, N1519 Houston, TX 77030, USA

2Department of Psychiatry, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637, USA

3National Institute of Mental Health Intramural Research Program, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892-4094, USA

author email corresponding author email

BMC Genomics 2002, 3:30doi:10.1186/1471-2164-3-30

Published: 22 October 2002

Abstract

Background

Multiple candidate regions as sites for Schizophrenia and Bipolar susceptibility genes have been reported, suggesting heterogeneity of susceptibility genes or oligogenic inheritance. Linkage analysis has suggested chromosome 13q32 as one of the regions with evidence of linkage to Schizophrenia and, separately, to Bipolar disorder (BP). SLC15A1 and GPC5 are two of the candidate genes within an approximately 10-cM region of linkage on chromosome 13q32. In order to identify a possible role for these candidates as susceptibility genes, we performed mutation screening on the coding regions of these two genes in 7 families (n-20) affected with Bipolar disorder showing linkage to 13q32.

Results

Genomic organization revealed 23 exons in SLC15A1 and 8 exons in GPC5 gene respectively. Sequencing of the exons did not reveal mutations in the GPC5 gene in the 7 families affected with BP. Two polymorphic variants were discovered in the SLC15A1 gene. One was T to C substitution in the third position of codon encoding alanine at 1403 position of mRNA in exon 17, and the other was A to G substitution in the untranslated region at position 2242 of mRNA in exon 23.

Conclusions

Mutation analysis of 2 candidate genes for Bipolar disorder on chromosome 13q32 did not identify any potentially causative mutations within the coding regions or splice junctions of the SLC15A1 or GPC5 genes in 7 families showing linkage to 13q32. Further studies of the regulatory regions are needed to completely exclude these genes as causative for Bipolar disorder.


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