Authors
DJ MacIntyre, DHR Blackwood, DJ Porteous, BS Pickard, Walter J Muir
Publication date
2003/3
Source
Molecular psychiatry
Volume
8
Issue
3
Pages
275-287
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Description
Linkage studies of mental illness have provided suggestive evidence of susceptibility loci over many broad chromosomal regions. Pinpointing causative gene mutations by conventional linkage strategies alone is problematic. The breakpoints of chromosomal abnormalities occurring in patients with mental illness may be more direct pointers to the relevant gene locus. Publications that describe patients where chromosomal abnormalities co-exist with mental illness are reviewed along with supporting evidence that this may amount to an association. Chromosomal abnormalities are considered to be of possible significance if (a) the abnormality is rare and there are independent reports of its coexistence with psychiatric illness, or (b) there is colocalisation of the abnormality with a region of suggestive linkage findings, or (c) there is an apparent cosegregation of the abnormality with psychiatric illness within the …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
DJ MacIntyre, DHR Blackwood, DJ Porteous… - Molecular psychiatry, 2003