|
|
|
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|
|||
New Hopkins Databases Put Wings on Search for Bipolar Risk Genes A new free, public online
database should greatly speed efforts to find genes linked to increased
risk of bipolar disorder. The new Bipolar Disorder Phenome Databasea
joint project of Johns Hopkins Psychiatry and the National Institute of
Mental Healthis the first of its kind. This database offers detailed
descriptions of symptoms and course of disease on for more than over 5,000
people with bipolar illness, a mood disorder The new database, available at: http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/Psychiatry/moods/ "This publicly available database describes
the clinical picture of bipolar disorder in the fullest detail possible,"
says James Potash, M.D., who led the Hopkins portion of efforts to assemble
the site. "It also lets us pick out meaningful clusters of symptoms
subtypes that will ultimately help identify genes." Collecting accurate descriptions of patients in large enough numbers to ensure reliable results is costly and time-consuming, he adds. The Bipolar Disorder Phenome Database lets researchers tap into information from two national studies of BD families that was collected over 20 years through patient surveys and interviews. The studies included patients with well-documented bipolar disorder who had first-degree relatives with a major mood illness. The database is one of two now available at Hopkins' BioinforMOODics web site (http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/Psychiatry/moods/bioinformoodics/index.html). A second offering on the BioinforMOODics site-QuickSNP- is also set up to streamline gene searches but, unlike the BD database, it isn't specific to mood disorders research. The tool enables users to intelligently select the specific DNA signposts or markers-the single nucleotide polymorphisms, or SNPs-present in specific chromosome regions most likely to yield meaningful results. It also tells researchers if genes they want to study are represented on commercially-available gene chips. Set up of the Bipolar Disorder Phenome Database was funded by NIMH grants. Earlier data-providing studies were also funded by the Charles A. Dana Foundation, the Stanley Medical Research Institute and a NARSAD Young Investigator award. The Hopkins research team included Peter P.
Zandi, Ph.D., Dean MacKinnon, M.D., Jennifer Toolan, Jo Steele, Erin Miller
and Justin Pearl. Deepak Grover, Ph.D., and Alonzo Woodfield helped devise
the QuickSNP site. |
|
||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
JHM Appointments | Employment @ JHM | Finding a Doctor | FAQs | Disclaimer | Maps & Directions | Contact JHM | Site Map |
|
|