OBJECTIVE: This study was an attempt to replicate evidence for a
vulnerability locus for schizophrenia and associated disorders in the
8p22-21 region reported by Pulver and colleagues. METHOD: The linkage
sample of the Irish Study of High-Density Schizophrenia Families consists
of 265 multiplex families containing 1,408 individuals. Fifteen markers
covering 30 centimorgans on chromosome 8p were tested. Three statistical
methods were used: two-point and multipoint heterogeneity lod scores and a
multipoint nonparametric test. RESULTS: According to two-point
heterogeneity lod scores, the strongest evidence for linkage was found for
markers D8S1731 (maximum lod score = 2.00), D8S1715 (maximum lod score =
2.52), and D8S133 (maximum lod score = 2.08) by assuming a phenotypic
definition of all psychiatric illness and a range of genetic models.
According to multipoint heterogeneity lod scores, the strongest evidence
for linkage (maximum lod score = 2.34), found by using a dominant genetic
model and a broad definition of the schizophrenia spectrum, extended over a
10-cM region between markers D8S1715 and D8S1739. Multipoint nonparametric
linkage found the strongest evidence (maximum z = 2.51) over a broader
region when either a diagnosis of core schizophrenia or a narrow definition
of the schizophrenia spectrum was used. This putative vulnerability locus
was segregating in 10%-25% of the families studied. CONCLUSIONS: This study
supports the existence of a vulnerability locus for schizophrenia on
chromosome 8p. In this sample, this locus appears to influence the risk of
illness in only a modest proportion of families and predisposes to a range
of schizophrenia spectrum and possibly nonspectrum disorders.Abstract Teaser