• Neurology · Jun 2006

    A genome-wide scan and HCRTR2 candidate gene analysis in a European cluster headache cohort.

    • L Baumber, C Sjöstrand, M Leone, H Harty, G Bussone, J Hillert, R C Trembath, and M B Russell.
    • Division of Medical Genetics, University of Leicester, UK.
    • Neurology. 2006 Jun 27; 66 (12): 1888-93.

    ObjectiveTo investigate the molecular genetic basis of cluster headache (CH), using a genome-wide scan and candidate gene strategy.MethodsNorthern European CH families and a case-control cohort of Danish, Swedish, and British origin (total n = 259 sporadic CH patients), including 267 control subjects matched for ancestry, participated in the study. A genome-wide genetic screen using approximately 400 microsatellite markers was performed for five informative Danish CH families. Additional markers were typed for those loci generating statistical evidence suggestive of linkage, together with genotypes for 111 individuals from further Danish and Italian kindreds. Sporadic CH patients and controls were investigated by association analysis for variation in the candidate gene, HCRTR2. Finally, complete HCRTR2 sequencing was undertaken for eight independent probands.ResultsPotential linkage was identified at four possible disease loci in Danish kindreds, yet no single chromosome location generated a lod or NPL score of recognized significance. No deleterious sequence variants of the HCRTR2 gene were detected by comparison to wild-type sequence. Association of the HCRTR2 gene was not replicated in this large dataset, even when the data were stratified into distinct populations.ConclusionsCluster headache is a complex genetic disorder, with possible phenotypic and genetic heterogeneity compounding attempts at gene identification.

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