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Dive into the research topics where Eduardo Fournier is active.

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Featured researches published by Eduardo Fournier.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2013

Genome-wide association study of Tourette's syndrome

Jeremiah M. Scharf; Dongmei Yu; Carol A. Mathews; Benjamin M. Neale; S. E. Stewart; Jesen Fagerness; Patrick D. Evans; Eric R. Gamazon; Christopher K. Edlund; Anna Tikhomirov; Lisa Osiecki; Cornelia Illmann; Anna Pluzhnikov; Anuar Konkashbaev; Lea K. Davis; Buhm Han; Jacquelyn Crane; Priya Moorjani; Andrew Crenshaw; Melissa Parkin; Victor I. Reus; Thomas L. Lowe; M. Rangel-Lugo; Sylvain Chouinard; Yves Dion; Simon Girard; Danielle C. Cath; J.H. Smit; Robert A. King; Thomas V. Fernandez

Tourettes syndrome (TS) is a developmental disorder that has one of the highest familial recurrence rates among neuropsychiatric diseases with complex inheritance. However, the identification of definitive TS susceptibility genes remains elusive. Here, we report the first genome-wide association study (GWAS) of TS in 1285 cases and 4964 ancestry-matched controls of European ancestry, including two European-derived population isolates, Ashkenazi Jews from North America and Israel and French Canadians from Quebec, Canada. In a primary meta-analysis of GWAS data from these European ancestry samples, no markers achieved a genome-wide threshold of significance (P<5 × 10−8); the top signal was found in rs7868992 on chromosome 9q32 within COL27A1 (P=1.85 × 10−6). A secondary analysis including an additional 211 cases and 285 controls from two closely related Latin American population isolates from the Central Valley of Costa Rica and Antioquia, Colombia also identified rs7868992 as the top signal (P=3.6 × 10−7 for the combined sample of 1496 cases and 5249 controls following imputation with 1000 Genomes data). This study lays the groundwork for the eventual identification of common TS susceptibility variants in larger cohorts and helps to provide a more complete understanding of the full genetic architecture of this disorder.


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 1996

Use of linkage disequilibrium approaches to map genes for bipolar disorder in the Costa Rican population

Michael A. Escamilla; Mitzi Spesny; Victor I. Reus; Alvaro Gallegos; Luis Meza; Julio Molina; Lodewijk A. Sandkuijl; Eduardo Fournier; Pedro León; Lauren B. Smith; Nelson B. Freimer

Linkage disequilibrium (LD) analysis provides a powerful means for screening the genome to map the location of disease genes, such as those for bipolar disorder (BP). As described in this paper, the population of the Central Valley of Costa Rica, which is descended from a small number of founders, should be suitable for LD mapping; this assertion is supported by reconstruction of extended haplotypes shared by distantly related individuals in this population suffering low-frequency hearing loss (LFHL1), which has previously been mapped by linkage analysis. A sampling strategy is described for applying LD methods to map genes for BP, and clinical and demographic characteristics of an initially collected sample are discussed. This sample will provide a complement to a previously collected set of Costa Rican BP families which is under investigation using standard linkage analysis.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2008

Sex-stratified Linkage Analysis Identifies a Female-specific Locus for IgE to Cockroach in Costa Ricans

Gary M. Hunninghake; Jessica Lasky-Su; Manuel Soto-Quiros; Lydiana Avila; Catherine Liang; Stephen Lake; Thomas J. Hudson; Mitzi Spesny; Eduardo Fournier; Jody S. Sylvia; Nelson B. Freimer; Barbara J. Klanderman; Benjamin A. Raby; Juan C. Celedón

RATIONALE The basis for gender influences on allergen-specific IgEs is unclear. OBJECTIVES To perform regular and sex-stratified genomewide linkage analyses of IgE to each of three allergens (Ascaris lumbricoides, Blatella germanica [German cockroach]), and Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus [dust mite]) and to conduct an association study of a candidate gene in a linked genomic region. METHODS Genomewide linkage analyses of allergen-specific IgEs were conducted in 653 members of eight large families of Costa Rican children with asthma. An analysis of the association between single-nucleotide polymorphisms in thymic stromal lymphopoietin (TSLP) and IgE measurements was conducted in 417 parent-child trios in Costa Rica. Significant results were replicated in 470 families of white children in the Childhood Asthma Management Program (CAMP). MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS Among all subjects, there was suggestive evidence of linkage (LOD >/= 2.72) to IgE to Ascaris (on chromosome 7q) and IgE to dust mite (on chromosomes 7p and 12q). In a sex-stratified analysis, there was significant evidence of linkage to IgE to cockroach on chromosome 5q23 (peak LOD, 4.14 at 127 cM) in female subjects. TSLP is located within the 1.5 LOD-unit support interval for this linkage peak and has female-specific effects on lung disease in mice. In a sex-stratified analysis, the T allele of single-nucleotide polymorphism rs2289276 in TSLP was associated with reductions in IgE to cockroach (in Costa Rican girls) and total IgE (in girls in Costa Rica and in CAMP; P value for sex-by-genotype interaction, <0.01 in both studies). CONCLUSIONS Consistent with findings in murine models, a variant in TSLP may have female-specific effects on allergic phenotypes.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2002

Genomewide Linkage Disequilibrium Mapping of Severe Bipolar Disorder in a Population Isolate

Roel A. Ophoff; Michael A. Escamilla; Mitzi Spesny; Dar Meshi; Wing-Man Poon; Julio Molina; Eduardo Fournier; Alvaro Gallegos; Carol A. Mathews; Thomas C. Neylan; Steven L. Batki; Erin Roche; Margarita Ramírez; Sandra Silva; Melissa C. De Mille; Penny N. Dong; Pedro León; Victor I. Reus; Lodewijk A. Sandkuijl; Nelson B. Freimer

Genomewide association studies may offer the best promise for genetic mapping of complex traits. Such studies in outbred populations require very densely spaced single-nucleotide polymorphisms. In recently founded population isolates, however, extensive linkage disequilibrium (LD) may make these studies feasible with currently available sets of short tandem repeat markers, spaced at intervals as large as a few centimorgans. We report the results of a genomewide association study of severe bipolar disorder (BP-I), using patients from the isolated population of the central valley of Costa Rica. We observed LD with BP-I on several chromosomes; the most striking results were in proximal 8p, a region that has previously shown linkage to schizophrenia. This region could be important for severe psychiatric disorders, rather than for a specific phenotype.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 1999

Assessing the Feasibility of Linkage Disequilibrium Methods for Mapping Complex Traits: An Initial Screen for Bipolar Disorder Loci on Chromosome 18

Michael A. Escamilla; L. Alison McInnes; Mitzi Spesny; Victor I. Reus; Norito Shimayoshi; David J. Tyler; Sandra Silva; Julio Molina; Alvaro Gallegos; Luis Meza; Maria L. Cruz; Steven L. Batki; Sophia Vinogradov; Thomas C. Neylan; Jasmine B. Nguyen; Eduardo Fournier; Carmen Araya; Samuel H. Barondes; Pedro León; Lodewijk A. Sandkuijl; Nelson B. Freimer

Linkage disequilibrium (LD) analysis has been promoted as a method of mapping disease genes, particularly in isolated populations, but has not yet been used for genome-screening studies of complex disorders. We present results of a study to investigate the feasibility of LD methods for genome screening using a sample of individuals affected with severe bipolar mood disorder (BP-I), from an isolated population of the Costa Rican central valley. Forty-eight patients with BP-I were genotyped for markers spaced at approximately 6-cM intervals across chromosome 18. Chromosome 18 was chosen because a previous genome-screening linkage study of two Costa Rican families had suggested a BP-I locus on this chromosome. Results of the current study suggest that LD methods will be useful for mapping BP-I in a larger sample. The results also support previously reported possible localizations (obtained from a separate collection of patients) of BP-I-susceptibility genes at two distinct sites on this chromosome. Current limitations of LD screening for identifying loci for complex traits are discussed, and recommendations are made for future research with these methods.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2001

Linkage Analysis of a Complex Pedigree with Severe Bipolar Disorder, Using a Markov Chain Monte Carlo Method

Chad Garner; L. Alison McInnes; Mitzi Spesny; Eduardo Fournier; Pedro León; Nelson B. Freimer

Recently developed algorithms permit nonparametric linkage analysis of large, complex pedigrees with multiple inbreeding loops. We have used one such algorithm, implemented in the package SimWalk2, to reanalyze previously published genome-screen data from a Costa Rican kindred segregating for severe bipolar disorder. Our results are consistent with previous linkage findings on chromosome 18 and suggest a new locus on chromosome 5 that was not identified using traditional linkage analysis.


PLOS ONE | 2013

CNV Analysis in Tourette Syndrome Implicates Large Genomic Rearrangements in COL8A1 and NRXN1

Abhishek Nag; Elena G. Bochukova; Barbara Kremeyer; Desmond D. Campbell; Heike Muller; Ana Victoria Valencia-Duarte; Julio César Cardona; Isabel C. Rivas; Sandra Catalina Mesa; Mauricio Cuartas; Jharley Jair García; Gabriel Bedoya; William Cornejo; Luis Diego Herrera; Roxana Romero; Eduardo Fournier; Victor I. Reus; Thomas L. Lowe; I. Sadaf Farooqi; Carol A. Mathews; Lauren M. McGrath; Dongmei Yu; Ed Cook; Kai Wang; Jeremiah M. Scharf; David L. Pauls; Nelson B. Freimer; Vincent Plagnol; Andres Ruiz-Linares

Tourette syndrome (TS) is a neuropsychiatric disorder with a strong genetic component. However, the genetic architecture of TS remains uncertain. Copy number variation (CNV) has been shown to contribute to the genetic make-up of several neurodevelopmental conditions, including schizophrenia and autism. Here we describe CNV calls using SNP chip genotype data from an initial sample of 210 TS cases and 285 controls ascertained in two Latin American populations. After extensive quality control, we found that cases (N = 179) have a significant excess (P = 0.006) of large CNV (>500 kb) calls compared to controls (N = 234). Amongst 24 large CNVs seen only in the cases, we observed four duplications of the COL8A1 gene region. We also found two cases with ∼400kb deletions involving NRXN1, a gene previously implicated in neurodevelopmental disorders, including TS. Follow-up using multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (and including 53 more TS cases) validated the CNV calls and identified additional patients with rearrangements in COL8A1 and NRXN1, but none in controls. Examination of available parents indicates that two out of three NRXN1 deletions detected in the TS cases are de-novo mutations. Our results are consistent with the proposal that rare CNVs play a role in TS aetiology and suggest a possible role for rearrangements in the COL8A1 and NRXN1 gene regions.


Psychiatric Genetics | 2004

Genetic studies of neuropsychiatric disorders in Costa Rica: a model for the use of isolated populations.

Carol A. Mathews; Victor I. Reus; Julio Bejarano; Michael Escamilla; Eduardo Fournier; Luis Diego Herrera; Thomas L. Lowe; McInnes La; Julio Molina; Roel A. Ophoff; Henriette Raventos; Lodewijk A. Sandkuijl; Mitzi Spesny; Pedro León; Nelson B. Freimer

The importance of genetics in understanding the etiology of mental illness has become increasingly clear in recent years, as more evidence has mounted that almost all neuropsychiatric disorders have a genetic component. It has also become clear, however, that these disorders are etiologically complex, and multiple genetic and environmental factors contribute to their makeup. So far, traditional linkage mapping studies have not definitively identified specific disease genes for neuropsychiatric disorders, although some potential candidates have been identified via these methods (e.g. the dysbindin gene in schizophrenia; Straub et al., 2002; Schwab et al., 2003). For this reason, alternative approaches are being attempted, including studies in genetically isolated populations. Because isolated populations have a high degree of genetic homogeneity, their use may simplify the process of identifying disease genes in disorders where multiple genes may play a role. Several areas of Latin America contain genetically isolated populations that are well suited for the study of neuropsychiatric disorders. Genetic studies of several major psychiatric illnesses, including bipolar disorder, major depression, schizophrenia, Tourette Syndrome, alcohol dependence, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, and obsessive–compulsive disorder, are currently underway in these regions. In this paper we highlight the studies currently being conducted by our groups in the Central Valley of Costa Rica to illustrate the potential advantages of this population for genetic studies.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Fine-scale mapping of a locus for severe bipolar mood disorder on chromosome 18p11.3 in the Costa Rican population

L. Alison McInnes; Victor I. Reus; Glenn Barnes; Olga Charlat; Satya Jawahar; Steve Lewitzky; Qing Yang; Quyen Duong; Mitzi Spesny; Carmen Araya; Xinia Araya; Alvaro Gallegos; Luis Meza; Julio Molina; Rolando Ramirez; Roxana Mendez; Sandra Silva; Eduardo Fournier; Steven L. Batki; Carol A. Mathews; Thomas C. Neylan; Charles E. Glatt; Michael A. Escamilla; David Luo; Paresh Gajiwala; Stephen Crook; Jasmine B. Nguyen; Erin Roche; Joanne M. Meyer; Pedro León

We have searched for genes predisposing to bipolar disorder (BP) by studying individuals with the most extreme form of the affected phenotype, BP-I, ascertained from the genetically isolated population of the Central Valley of Costa Rica (CVCR). The results of a previous linkage analysis on two extended CVCR BP-I pedigrees, CR001 and CR004, and of linkage disequilibrium (LD) analyses of a CVCR population sample of BP-I patients implicated a candidate region on 18p11.3. We further investigated this region by creating a physical map and developing 4 new microsatellite and 26 single-nucleotide polymorphism markers for typing in the pedigree and population samples. We report the results of fine-scale association analyses in the population sample, as well as evaluation of haplotypes in pedigree CR001. Our results suggest a candidate region containing six genes but also highlight the complexities of LD mapping of common disorders.


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 2004

Genetic mapping using haplotype and model-free linkage analysis supports previous evidence for a locus predisposing to severe bipolar disorder at 5q31-33

Kyung Sue Hong; L. Alison McInnes; Jennifer Lucas; Sandra Silva; Eduardo Fournier; Pedro León; Julio Molina; Victor I. Reus; Lodewijk A. Sandkuijl; Nelson B. Freimer

We report further evidence for our previous suggestion [Garner et al., 2001 : Am J Hum Genet 68:1061–1064] of a locus on 5q predisposing to bipolar I disorder (BP‐I) in an extended Costa Rican pedigree. We genotyped additional microsatellite markers in this region and applied a multi‐point non‐parametric linkage analysis (SimWalk2). Significant identity‐by‐descent allele sharing among affected relatives was observed for all of the 20 markers tested in a segment of approximately 15 cM. Most affected individuals shared a single haplotype over this region; breaks within this haplotype may suggest a more restricted candidate location for a BP‐I gene. These results support the suggestion that a locus at 5q31‐33, together with a previously reported locus at 18q22‐23, may provide the major genetic risk for BP‐I in this family.

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Mitzi Spesny

University of Costa Rica

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Victor I. Reus

University of California

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Julio Molina

University of California

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Pedro León

University of Costa Rica

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Lodewijk A. Sandkuijl

Leiden University Medical Center

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L. Alison McInnes

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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