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Featured researches published by Helgi Jonsson.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2002

Neuregulin 1 and Susceptibility to Schizophrenia

Hreinn Stefansson; Engilbert Sigurdsson; Valgerdur Steinthorsdottir; Soley Bjornsdottir; T. Sigmundsson; Shyamali Ghosh; J Brynjolfsson; Steinunn Gunnarsdottir; Ómar Ívarsson; Thomas T. Chou; Omar Hjaltason; Birgitta Birgisdottir; Helgi Jonsson; Vala G. Gudnadottir; Elsa Gudmundsdottir; Asgeir Björnsson; Brynjólfur Ingvarsson; Andres Ingason; Sigmundur Sigfússon; Hronn Hardardottir; Richard P. Harvey; Donna Lai; Mingdong Zhou; Daniela Brunner; Vincent Mutel; Acuna Gonzalo; Greg Lemke; Jesus Sainz; Gardar Johannesson; Thorkell Andresson

The cause of schizophrenia is unknown, but it has a significant genetic component. Pharmacologic studies, studies of gene expression in man, and studies of mouse mutants suggest involvement of glutamate and dopamine neurotransmitter systems. However, so far, strong association has not been found between schizophrenia and variants of the genes encoding components of these systems. Here, we report the results of a genomewide scan of schizophrenia families in Iceland; these results support previous work, done in five populations, showing that schizophrenia maps to chromosome 8p. Extensive fine-mapping of the 8p locus and haplotype-association analysis, supplemented by a transmission/disequilibrium test, identifies neuregulin 1 (NRG1) as a candidate gene for schizophrenia. NRG1 is expressed at central nervous system synapses and has a clear role in the expression and activation of neurotransmitter receptors, including glutamate receptors. Mutant mice heterozygous for either NRG1 or its receptor, ErbB4, show a behavioral phenotype that overlaps with mouse models for schizophrenia. Furthermore, NRG1 hypomorphs have fewer functional NMDA receptors than wild-type mice. We also demonstrate that the behavioral phenotypes of the NRG1 hypomorphs are partially reversible with clozapine, an atypical antipsychotic drug used to treat schizophrenia.


Medicine | 1989

Outcome in systemic lupus erythematosus: a prospective study of patients from a defined population.

Helgi Jonsson; Ola Nived; Gunnar Sturfelt

All adult patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) (greater than or equal to 15 years old, n = 86) from a defined population (approximately 160,000 population at risk) were followed prospectively over 6 years. The study area comprised 2 health care districts served by only 1 hospital. Retrieval was based on clinical case finding and computerized diagnosis and laboratory registers. The incidence of the disease was 4.0 cases/100,000 adults/year and was stable during the 6 years, suggesting that completeness of retrieval was high. Point prevalence by the end of 1986 was 42 cases/100,000 population at risk and 5-year survival in the prospective group 97%. Immunologically the group was characterized by a high frequency of positive anti-dsDNA (73%), and a low frequency of rheumatoid factor positivity (10%). The frequency of ARA criteria (median, 6) was comparable with previous larger series of selected patients. Sixteen percent of the patients were males, and they had more serositis and renal manifestations than females. In view of the low mortality we studied the more sensitive outcome measures: disease activity, irreversible organ damage, and functional impairment. After the diagnosis year, disease flares occurred with a constant frequency of 0.2 flares/year/patient, even after long duration of disease. Patients with neuropsychiatric disease, history of drug reactions, and immunological abnormalities such as persistent hypocomplementemia, antibodies to dsDNA, and cardiolipin had a high frequency of relapse. In contrast, elderly patients with serositis during their first flare seldom relapsed. The number of gainfully employed individuals was normal. Neuropsychiatric disease and joint involvement were principal causes of long-standing functional impairment. Notably, patients with renal disease usually fared well, as reflected by preserved renal function and little functional by preserved renal function and little functional impairment. Disease duration and glucocorticoid treatment were major denominators for morbidity due to infections and vascular disease with the incidence of myocardial infarctions being 9 times more common than that in a Swedish control population. Prolonged glucocorticoid treatment was also related to mortality, which was predominantly due to cardiovascular or central nervous system disease. The present prospective and epidemiologically based study of outcome in SLE was made possible by a uniquely coordinated health care system, enabling complete identification of the patients within the study area.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2003

Genomewide Scan for Hand Osteoarthritis: A Novel Mutation in Matrilin-3

Stefán Einar Stefánsson; Helgi Jonsson; Thorvaldur Ingvarsson; Ileana Manolescu; Hjortur H. Jonsson; Guðbjörg Ólafsdóttir; Ebba Palsdottir; Gerður Stefánsdóttir; Guðfinna Sveinbjörnsdóttir; Michael L. Frigge; Augustine Kong; Jeffrey R. Gulcher; Kari Stefansson

Osteoarthritis (OA) is the most common human joint disease, characterized by loss and/or remodeling of joint synovium, cartilage, and bone. Here, we describe a genomewide linkage analysis of patients with idiopathic hand OA who were carefully phenotyped for involvement of either or both the distal interphalangeal (DIP) joints and the first carpometacarpal (CMC1) joints. The best linkage peaks were on chromosomes 4q and 3p and on the short arm of chromosome 2. Genomewide significance was reached for a locus on chromosome 2 for patients with affected CMC1 joints (LOD = 4.97); this locus was also significant for patients with OA in both CMC1 and DIP joints (LOD = 4.44). The peak LOD score at this locus coincides with a gene, MATN3, encoding the noncollagenous cartilage extracellular matrix protein, matrilin-3. Subsequent screening of the genomic sequence revealed a missense mutation, of a conserved amino acid codon, changing threonine to methionine in the epidermal growth factor-like domain in matrilin-3. The missense mutation cosegregates with hand OA in several families. The mutation frequency is slightly more than 2% in patients with hand OA in the Icelandic population and has a relative risk of 2.1.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2010

A Genome-Wide Association Study Identifies an Osteoarthritis Susceptibility Locus on Chromosome 7q22

Kerkhof Hjm.; Rik Lories; Ingrid Meulenbelt; Ingileif Jonsdottir; Ana M. Valdes; P. Arp; Thorvaldur Ingvarsson; Mila Jhamai; Helgi Jonsson; Lisette Stolk; Gudmar Thorleifsson; Guangju Zhai; Feng Zhang; Yanyan Zhu; R. van der Breggen; A J Carr; Michael Doherty; Sally Doherty; David T. Felson; Antonio Gonzalez; Bjarni V. Halldórsson; Deborah J. Hart; Valdimar B. Hauksson; Albert Hofman; Ioannidis Jpa.; Margreet Kloppenburg; Nancy E. Lane; John Loughlin; Frank P. Luyten; Michael C. Nevitt

OBJECTIVE To identify novel genes involved in osteoarthritis (OA), by means of a genome-wide association study. METHODS We tested 500,510 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 1,341 Dutch Caucasian OA cases and 3,496 Dutch Caucasian controls. SNPs associated with at least 2 OA phenotypes were analyzed in 14,938 OA cases and approximately 39,000 controls. Meta-analyses were performed using the program Comprehensive Meta-analysis, with P values <1 x 10(-7) considered genome-wide significant. RESULTS The C allele of rs3815148 on chromosome 7q22 (minor allele frequency 23%; intron 12 of the COG5 gene) was associated with a 1.14-fold increased risk (95% confidence interval 1.09-1.19) of knee and/or hand OA (P = 8 x 10(-8)) and also with a 30% increased risk of knee OA progression (95% confidence interval 1.03-1.64) (P = 0.03). This SNP is in almost complete linkage disequilibrium with rs3757713 (68 kb upstream of GPR22), which is associated with GPR22 expression levels in lymphoblast cell lines (P = 4 x 10(-12)). Immunohistochemistry experiments revealed that G protein-coupled receptor protein 22 (GPR22) was absent in normal mouse articular cartilage or synovium. However, GPR22-positive chondrocytes were found in the upper layers of the articular cartilage of mouse knee joints that were challenged with in vivo papain treatment or methylated bovine serum albumin treatment. GPR22-positive chondrocyte-like cells were also found in osteophytes in instability-induced OA. CONCLUSION Our findings identify a novel common variant on chromosome 7q22 that influences susceptibility to prevalence and progression of OA. Since the GPR22 gene encodes a G protein-coupled receptor, this is potentially an interesting therapeutic target.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2009

Large‐scale analysis of association between GDF5 and FRZB variants and osteoarthritis of the hip, knee, and hand

Evangelos Evangelou; Kay Chapman; Ingrid Meulenbelt; Fotini B. Karassa; John Loughlin; Andrew Carr; Michael Doherty; Sally Doherty; Juan J. Gomez-Reino; Antonio Gonzalez; Bjarni V. Halldórsson; Valdimar B. Hauksson; Albert Hofman; Deborah J. Hart; Shiro Ikegawa; Thorvaldur Ingvarsson; Qing Jiang; Ingileif Jonsdottir; Helgi Jonsson; Hanneke J. M. Kerkhof; Margreet Kloppenburg; Nancy E. Lane; Jia Li; Rik Lories; Joyce B. J. van Meurs; Annu Näkki; Michael C. Nevitt; Julio Rodriguez-Lopez; Dongquan Shi; P. Eline Slagboom

OBJECTIVE GDF5 and FRZB have been proposed as genetic loci conferring susceptibility to osteoarthritis (OA); however, the results of several studies investigating the association of OA with the rs143383 polymorphism of the GDF5 gene or the rs7775 and rs288326 polymorphisms of the FRZB gene have been conflicting or inconclusive. To examine these associations, we performed a large-scale meta-analysis of individual-level data. METHODS Fourteen teams contributed data on polymorphisms and knee, hip, and hand OA. For rs143383, the total number of cases and controls, respectively, was 5,789 and 7,850 for hip OA, 5,085 and 8,135 for knee OA, and 4,040 and 4,792 for hand OA. For rs7775, the respective sample sizes were 4,352 and 10,843 for hip OA, 3,545 and 6,085 for knee OA, and 4,010 and 5,151 for hand OA, and for rs288326, they were 4,346 and 8,034 for hip OA, 3,595 and 6,106 for knee OA, and 3,982 and 5,152 for hand OA. For each individual study, sex-specific odds ratios (ORs) were calculated for each OA phenotype that had been investigated. The ORs for each phenotype were synthesized using both fixed-effects and random-effects models for allele-based effects, and also for haplotype effects for FRZB. RESULTS A significant random-effects summary OR for knee OA was demonstrated for rs143383 (1.15 [95% confidence interval 1.09-1.22]) (P=9.4x10(-7)), with no significant between-study heterogeneity. Estimates of effect sizes for hip and hand OA were similar, but a large between-study heterogeneity was observed, and statistical significance was borderline (for OA of the hip [P=0.016]) or absent (for OA of the hand [P=0.19]). Analyses for FRZB polymorphisms and haplotypes did not reveal any statistically significant signals, except for a borderline association of rs288326 with hip OA (P=0.019). CONCLUSION Evidence of an association between the GDF5 rs143383 polymorphism and OA is substantially strong, but the genetic effects are consistent across different populations only for knee OA. Findings of this collaborative analysis do not support the notion that FRZB rs7775 or rs288326 has any sizable genetic effect on OA phenotypes.


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2011

Meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies confirms a susceptibility locus for knee osteoarthritis on chromosome 7q22

Evangelos Evangelou; Ana M. Valdes; Hanneke J. M. Kerkhof; Unnur Styrkarsdottir; Yanyan Zhu; Ingrid Meulenbelt; Rik Lories; Fotini B. Karassa; Przemko Tylzanowski; S.D. Bos; Toru Akune; N K Arden; Andrew Carr; Kay Chapman; L. Adrienne Cupples; Jin Dai; Panos Deloukas; Michael Doherty; Sally Doherty; Gunnar Engström; Antonio Gonzalez; Bjarni V. Halldórsson; Christina L. Hammond; Deborah J. Hart; Hafdis T. Helgadottir; Albert Hofman; Shiro Ikegawa; Thorvaldur Ingvarsson; Qing Jiang; Helgi Jonsson

Objectives Osteoarthritis (OA) is the most prevalent form of arthritis and accounts for substantial morbidity and disability, particularly in older people. It is characterised by changes in joint structure, including degeneration of the articular cartilage, and its aetiology is multifactorial with a strong postulated genetic component. Methods A meta-analysis was performed of four genome-wide association (GWA) studies of 2371 cases of knee OA and 35 909 controls in Caucasian populations. Replication of the top hits was attempted with data from 10 additional replication datasets. Results With a cumulative sample size of 6709 cases and 44 439 controls, one genome-wide significant locus was identified on chromosome 7q22 for knee OA (rs4730250, p=9.2×10−9), thereby confirming its role as a susceptibility locus for OA. Conclusion The associated signal is located within a large (500 kb) linkage disequilibrium block that contains six genes: PRKAR2B (protein kinase, cAMP-dependent, regulatory, type II, β), HPB1 (HMG-box transcription factor 1), COG5 (component of oligomeric golgi complex 5), GPR22 (G protein-coupled receptor 22), DUS4L (dihydrouridine synthase 4-like) and BCAP29 (B cell receptor-associated protein 29). Gene expression analyses of the (six) genes in primary cells derived from different joint tissues confirmed expression of all the genes in the joint environment.


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2011

Insights into the genetic architecture of osteoarthritis from stage 1 of the arcOGEN study

Kalliope Panoutsopoulou; Lorraine Southam; Katherine S. Elliott; N Wrayner; Guangju Zhai; Claude Beazley; Gudmar Thorleifsson; N K Arden; Andrew Carr; Kay Chapman; Panos Deloukas; Michael Doherty; A. W. McCaskie; William Ollier; Stuart H. Ralston; Tim D. Spector; Ana M. Valdes; Gillian A. Wallis; J M Wilkinson; E Arden; K Battley; Hannah Blackburn; F.J. Blanco; Suzannah Bumpstead; L. A. Cupples; Aaron G. Day-Williams; K Dixon; Sally Doherty; Tonu Esko; Evangelos Evangelou

Objectives The genetic aetiology of osteoarthritis has not yet been elucidated. To enable a well-powered genome-wide association study (GWAS) for osteoarthritis, the authors have formed the arcOGEN Consortium, a UK-wide collaborative effort aiming to scan genome-wide over 7500 osteoarthritis cases in a two-stage genome-wide association scan. Here the authors report the findings of the stage 1 interim analysis. Methods The authors have performed a genome-wide association scan for knee and hip osteoarthritis in 3177 cases and 4894 population-based controls from the UK. Replication of promising signals was carried out in silico in five further scans (44 449 individuals), and de novo in 14 534 independent samples, all of European descent. Results None of the association signals the authors identified reach genome-wide levels of statistical significance, therefore stressing the need for corroboration in sample sets of a larger size. Application of analytical approaches to examine the allelic architecture of disease to the stage 1 genome-wide association scan data suggests that osteoarthritis is a highly polygenic disease with multiple risk variants conferring small effects. Conclusions Identifying loci conferring susceptibility to osteoarthritis will require large-scale sample sizes and well-defined phenotypes to minimise heterogeneity.


Nature Genetics | 2011

Identification of low-frequency variants associated with gout and serum uric acid levels

Patrick Sulem; Daniel F. Gudbjartsson; G. Bragi Walters; Hafdis T. Helgadottir; Agnar Helgason; Sigurjon A. Gudjonsson; Carlo Zanon; Søren Besenbacher; Gyda Bjornsdottir; Olafur T. Magnusson; Gisli Magnusson; Eirikur Hjartarson; Jona Saemundsdottir; Arnaldur Gylfason; Adalbjorg Jonasdottir; Hilma Holm; Ari Karason; Thorunn Rafnar; Hreinn Stefansson; Ole A. Andreassen; Jesper Holst Pedersen; Allan I. Pack; Marieke de Visser; Lambertus A. Kiemeney; Arni Jon Geirsson; Gudmundur I. Eyjolfsson; Isleifur Olafsson; Augustine Kong; Gisli Masson; Helgi Jonsson

We tested 16 million SNPs, identified through whole-genome sequencing of 457 Icelanders, for association with gout and serum uric acid levels. Genotypes were imputed into 41,675 chip-genotyped Icelanders and their relatives, for effective sample sizes of 968 individuals with gout and 15,506 individuals for whom serum uric acid measurements were available. We identified a low-frequency missense variant (c.1580C>G) in ALDH16A1 associated with gout (OR = 3.12, P = 1.5 × 10−16, at-risk allele frequency = 0.019) and serum uric acid levels (effect = 0.36 s.d., P = 4.5 × 10−21). We confirmed the association with gout by performing Sanger sequencing on 6,017 Icelanders. The association with gout was stronger in males relative to females. We also found a second variant on chromosome 1 associated with gout (OR = 1.92, P = 0.046, at-risk allele frequency = 0.986) and serum uric acid levels (effect = 0.48 s.d., P = 4.5 × 10−16). This variant is close to a common variant previously associated with serum uric acid levels. This work illustrates how whole-genome sequencing data allow the detection of associations between low-frequency variants and complex traits.


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2009

Hand osteoarthritis in older women is associated with carotid and coronary atherosclerosis: the AGES Reykjavik study

Helgi Jonsson; G.P. Helgadottir; Thor Aspelund; Gudny Eiriksdottir; Sigurdur Sigurdsson; Thorvaldur Ingvarsson; Tamara B. Harris; Lenore J. Launer; Vilmundur Gudnason

Objective: There is evidence that atherosclerosis may contribute to the initiation or progression of osteoarthritis. To test this hypothesis, the presence and severity of hand osteoarthritis (HOA) was compared with markers of atherosclerotic vascular disease in an elderly population. Patients and Methods: The AGES Reykjavik Study is a population-based multidisciplinary study of ageing in the elderly population of Reykjavik. In a study of 2264 men (mean age 76 years; SD 6) and 3078 women (mean age 76 years; SD 6) the severity of HOA, scored from photographs, was compared with measures of atherosclerosis. These included carotid intimal thickness and plaque severity, coronary calcifications (CAC) and aortic calcifications and reported cardiac and cerebrovascular events. Results: After adjustment for confounders, both carotid plaque severity and CAC were significantly associated with HOA in women, with an odds ratio of 1.42 (95% CI 1.14 to 1.76, p = 0.002) for having CAC and 1.25 (95% CI 1.04 to 1.49, p = 0.016) for having moderate or severe carotid plaques. Both carotid plaques and CAC also exhibited significant linear trends in relation to HOA severity in women in the whole AGES Reykjavik cohort (p<0.001 and p = 0.027, respectively, for trend). No significant associations were seen in men. Despite this evidence of increased atherosclerosis, women with HOA did not report proportionally more previous cardiovascular or cerebrovascular events. Conclusions: The results indicate a linear association between the severity of HOA and atherosclerosis in older women. The pathological process of HOA seems to have some components in common with atherosclerosis. Prospective studies may help elucidate the possible mechanisms of this relationship.


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2014

A meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies identifies novel variants associated with osteoarthritis of the hip

Evangelos Evangelou; Hanneke J. M. Kerkhof; Unnur Styrkarsdottir; Evangelia E. Ntzani; S.D. Bos; Tonu Esko; Daniel S. Evans; Sarah Metrustry; Kalliope Panoutsopoulou; Y.F. Ramos; Gudmar Thorleifsson; Konstantinos K. Tsilidis; N K Arden; Nadim Aslam; Nicholas Bellamy; Fraser Birrell; F.J. Blanco; Andrew Carr; Kay Chapman; Aaron G. Day-Williams; Panos Deloukas; Michael Doherty; Gunnar Engström; Hafdis T. Helgadottir; Albert Hofman; Thorvaldur Ingvarsson; Helgi Jonsson; Aime Keis; J. Christiaan Keurentjes; Margreet Kloppenburg

Objectives Osteoarthritis (OA) is the most common form of arthritis with a clear genetic component. To identify novel loci associated with hip OA we performed a meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies (GWAS) on European subjects. Methods We performed a two-stage meta-analysis on more than 78 000 participants. In stage 1, we synthesised data from eight GWAS whereas data from 10 centres were used for ‘in silico’ or ‘de novo’ replication. Besides the main analysis, a stratified by sex analysis was performed to detect possible sex-specific signals. Meta-analysis was performed using inverse-variance fixed effects models. A random effects approach was also used. Results We accumulated 11 277 cases of radiographic and symptomatic hip OA. We prioritised eight single nucleotide polymorphism (SNPs) for follow-up in the discovery stage (4349 OA cases); five from the combined analysis, two male specific and one female specific. One locus, at 20q13, represented by rs6094710 (minor allele frequency (MAF) 4%) near the NCOA3 (nuclear receptor coactivator 3) gene, reached genome-wide significance level with p=7.9×10−9 and OR=1.28 (95% CI 1.18 to 1.39) in the combined analysis of discovery (p=5.6×10−8) and follow-up studies (p=7.3×10−4). We showed that this gene is expressed in articular cartilage and its expression was significantly reduced in OA-affected cartilage. Moreover, two loci remained suggestive associated; rs5009270 at 7q31 (MAF 30%, p=9.9×10−7, OR=1.10) and rs3757837 at 7p13 (MAF 6%, p=2.2×10−6, OR=1.27 in male specific analysis). Conclusions Novel genetic loci for hip OA were found in this meta-analysis of GWAS.

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Sigurdur Sigurdsson

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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T. B. Harris

National Institutes of Health

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