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DOI: 10.1002/ajmg.b.30226
¤ OpenAccess: Green
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Linkage analysis of anorexia and bulimia nervosa cohorts using selected behavioral phenotypes as quantitative traits or covariates

Silviu‐Alin Bacanu,Cynthia M. Bulik,Kelly L. Klump,Manfred M. Fichter,Katherine A. Halmi,Pamela K. Keel,Allan S. Kaplan,James E. Mitchell,Alessandro Rotondo,Michael Strober,Janet Treasure,D. Blake Woodside,Vibhor A. Sonpar,Wei Xie,Andrew W. Bergen,Wade H. Berrettini,Walter H. Kaye,Bernie Devlin

Anorexia nervosa
Bulimia nervosa
Linkage (software)
2005
To increase the likelihood of finding genetic variation conferring liability to eating disorders, we measured over 100 attributes thought to be related to liability to eating disorders on affected individuals from multiplex families and two cohorts: one recruited through a proband with anorexia nervosa (AN; AN cohort); the other recruited through a proband with bulimia nervosa (BN; BN cohort). By a multilayer decision process based on expert evaluation and statistical analysis, six traits were selected for linkage analysis (1): obsessionality (OBS), age at menarche (MENAR), and anxiety (ANX) for quantitative trait locus (QTL) linkage analysis; and lifetime minimum body mass index (BMI), concern over mistakes (CM), and food-related obsessions (OBF) for covariate-based linkage analysis. The BN cohort produced the largest linkage signals: for QTL linkage analysis, four suggestive signals: (for MENAR, at 10p13; for ANX, at 1q31.1, 4q35.2, and 8q13.1); for covariate-based linkage analyses, both significant and suggestive linkages (for BMI, one significant [4q21.1] and three suggestive [3p23, 10p13, 5p15.3]; for CM, two significant [16p13.3, 14q21.1] and three suggestive [4p15.33, 8q11.23, 10p11.21]; and for OBF, one significant [14q21.1] and five suggestive [4p16.1, 10p13.1, 8q11.23, 16p13.3, 18p11.31]). Results from the AN cohort were far less compelling: for QTL linkage analysis, two suggestive signals (for OBS at 6q21 and for ANX at 9p21.3); for covariate-based linkage analysis, five suggestive signals (for BMI at 4q13.1, for CM at 11p11.2 and 17q25.1, and for OBF at 17q25.1 and 15q26.2). Overlap between the two cohorts was minimal for substantial linkage signals.
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    Linkage analysis of anorexia and bulimia nervosa cohorts using selected behavioral phenotypes as quantitative traits or covariates” is a paper by Silviu‐Alin Bacanu Cynthia M. Bulik Kelly L. Klump Manfred M. Fichter Katherine A. Halmi Pamela K. Keel Allan S. Kaplan James E. Mitchell Alessandro Rotondo Michael Strober Janet Treasure D. Blake Woodside Vibhor A. Sonpar Wei Xie Andrew W. Bergen Wade H. Berrettini Walter H. Kaye Bernie Devlin published in 2005. It has an Open Access status of “green”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.