Darier's disease is a rare autosomal dominant skin disorder in which there is abnormal adhesion between keratinocytes. It appears to be associated with an increased prevalence of neuropsychiatric disorders including mental retardation and epilepsy. In addition we have previously reported a family in which major affective disorder cosegregates with Darier's disease. In the present study we have localized the gene for Darier's disease to chromosome 12q23-q24.1 by linkage analysis in five British pedigrees. We obtained a maximum two point lod score of 4.29 with marker D12S84 at zero recombination fraction. All five families showed evidence of linkage between the disease gene and markers in this region. Subsequent identification of the Darier's disease gene will provide insights into normal mechanisms of cell adhesion and may be of importance in the genetic investigation of neuropsychiatric disorders as well as elucidating the pathogenesis of Darier's disease itself.
We have recently described a family in which there is cosegregation of major affective disorder with Darier's disease and have mapped this autosomal dominant skin disorder to 12q23-q24.1. This has provided an interesting candidate region for genetic studies of bipolar disorder. We have studied the segregation of seven markers spanning the Darier's disease locus in 45 bipolar disorder pedigrees and found modest evidence in support of linkage under heterogeneity for 5 of these markers. Nonparametric analyses were suggestive of linkage with a marker at the gene encoding a secretory form of phospholipase A2. Our sample has relatively low power to detect linkage under heterogeneity and independent researchers should examine markers from this region in further samples of bipolar pedigrees.
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