Abstract

An increase in the severity of schizophrenia through consecutive generations (anticipation) has been found in some studies of families with affected members. Anticipation in five neurological disorders is known to arise from the expansion of CAG repeats between generations of affected individuals. The 'repeat expansion detection' method was used to screen individual genomes for the size of such expansions in a sample of schizophrenic and normal subjects. Comparison of the frequency distribution of CAG expansions observed in schizophrenic patients to that for normal subjects, showed that there are significantly more expansions in patients (p = 0.048). When male and female subjects are considered separately, there is a highly significant difference in the distribution of repeat sizes found between affected and normal females (p = 0.0023) but no significant difference between affected and normal males. Overall there is a 28% excess of expansions observed in affected versus normal females, and their presence confers a relative risk of 4.12 (p < 0.005). In contrast, the frequency distribution of age-at-onset with respect to repeat size is nearly the same in male and female patients and, when the sexes are combined, the larger (CAG)69-136 expansions are associated with a younger age-at-onset (p = 0.02).

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