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ContextPeople meeting diagnostic criteria for anxiety or depressive disorders tend to score high on the personality scale of neuroticism. Studying this personality dimension can give insights into the etiology of these important psychiatric disorders.ObjectivesTo undertake a comprehensive genome-wide linkage study of neuroticism using large study samples that have been measured multiple times and to compare the results between countries for replication and across time within countries for consistency.DesignGenome-wide linkage scan.SettingTwin individuals and their family members from Australia and the Netherlands.ParticipantsNineteen thousand six hundred thirty-five sibling pairs completed self-report questionnaires for neuroticism up to 5 times over a period of up to 22 years. Five thousand sixty-nine sibling pairs were genotyped with microsatellite markers.MethodsNonparametric linkage analyses were conducted in MERLIN-REGRESS for the mean neuroticism scores averaged across time. Additional analyses were conducted for the time-specific measures of neuroticism from each country to investigate consistency of linkage results.ResultsThree chromosomal regions exceeded empirically derived thresholds for suggestive linkage using mean neuroticism scores: 10p 5 Kosambi cM (cM) (Dutch study sample), 14q 103 cM (Dutch study sample), and 18q 117 cM (combined Australian and Dutch study sample), but only 14q retained significance after correction for multiple testing. These regions all showed evidence for linkage in individual time-specific measures of neuroticism and 1 (18q) showed some evidence for replication between countries. Linkage intervals for these regions all overlap with regions identified in other studies of neuroticism or related traits and/or in studies of anxiety in mice.ConclusionsOur results demonstrate the value of the availability of multiple measures over time and add to the optimism reported in recent reviews for replication of linkage regions for neuroticism. These regions are likely to harbor causal variants for neuroticism and its related psychiatric disorders and can inform prioritization of results from genome-wide association studies.

Original publication

DOI

10.1001/archpsyc.65.6.649

Type

Journal article

Journal

Archives of general psychiatry

Publication Date

06/2008

Volume

65

Pages

649 - 658

Addresses

Department of Genetic Epidemiology, Queensland Institute of Medical Research, 300 Herston Rd, Brisbane, Australia 4029. naomi.wray@qimr.edu.au

Keywords

Chromosomes, Human, Pair 10, Chromosomes, Human, Pair 14, Chromosomes, Human, Pair 18, Humans, Diseases in Twins, Cohort Studies, Longitudinal Studies, Chromosome Mapping, Neurotic Disorders, Personality Disorders, Personality Inventory, Comorbidity, Sex Factors, Genotype, Lod Score, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Adolescent, Adult, Australia, Netherlands, Female, Male