Vesa Ollikainen
University of Helsinki
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Publication
Featured researches published by Vesa Ollikainen.
American Journal of Human Genetics | 1999
Iiris Hovatta; Teppo Varilo; Jaana Suvisaari; Joseph D. Terwilliger; Vesa Ollikainen; Ritva Arajärvi; Hannu Juvonen; Marja-Liisa Kokko-Sahin; Leena Väisänen; Heikki Mannila; Jouko Lönnqvist; Leena Peltonen
Schizophrenia is a severe mental disorder affecting approximately 1% of the worlds population. Here, we report the results from a three-stage genomewide screen performed in a study sample from an internal isolate of Finland. An effort was made to identify genes predisposing for schizophrenia that are potentially enriched in this isolate, which has an exceptionally high lifetime risk for this trait. Ancestors of the local families with schizophrenia were traced back to the foundation of the population in the 17th century. This genealogical information was used as the basis for the study strategy, which involved screening for alleles shared among affected individuals originating from common ancestors. We found four chromosomal regions with markers revealing pairwise LOD scores>1.0: 1q32.2-q41 (Z(max)=3.82, dominant affecteds-only model), 4q31 (Z(max)=2. 74, dominant 90%-penetrance model), 9q21 (Z(max)=1.95, dominant 90%-penetrance model), and Xp11.4-p11.3 (Z(max)=2.01, recessive 90%-penetrance model). This finding suggests that there are several putative loci predisposing to schizophrenia, even in this isolate.
Journal of Medical Genetics | 2001
Jaana Nopola-Hemmi; Birgitta Myllyluoma; Tuomas Haltia; Mikko Taipale; Vesa Ollikainen; Timo Ahonen; Arja Voutilainen; Juha Kere; Elisabeth Widen
Developmental dyslexia is a neurofunctional disorder characterised by an unexpected difficulty in learning to read and write despite adequate intelligence, motivation, and education. Previous studies have suggested mostly quantitative susceptibility loci for dyslexia on chromosomes 1, 2, 6, and 15, but no genes have been identified yet. We studied a large pedigree, ascertained from 140 families considered, segregating pronounced dyslexia in an autosomal dominant fashion. Affected status and the subtype of dyslexia were determined by neuropsychological tests. A genome scan with 320 markers showed a novel dominant locus linked to dyslexia in the pericentromeric region of chromosome 3 with a multipoint lod score of 3.84. Nineteen out of 21 affected pedigree members shared this region identical by descent (corrected p<0.001). Previously implicated genomic regions showed no evidence for linkage. Sequencing of two positional candidate genes, 5HT1F andDRD3, did not support their role in dyslexia. The new locus on chromosome 3 is associated with deficits in all three essential components involved in the reading process, namely phonological awareness, rapid naming, and verbal short term memory.
American Journal of Human Genetics | 2003
Hannele Laivuori; Päivi Lahermo; Vesa Ollikainen; Elisabeth Widen; Leena Häivä-Mällinen; Helena Sundström; Tarja Laitinen; Risto Kaaja; Olavi Ylikorkala; Juha Kere
Preeclampsia is a common, pregnancy-specific disorder characterized by reduced placental perfusion, endothelial dysfunction, elevated blood pressure, and proteinuria. The pathogenesis of this heterogeneous disorder is incompletely understood, but it has a familial component, which suggests that one or more common alleles may act as susceptibility genes. We hypothesized that, in a founder population, the genetic background of preeclampsia might also show reduced heterogeneity, and we have performed a genomewide scan in 15 multiplex families recruited predominantly in the Kainuu province in central eastern Finland. We found two loci that exceeded the threshold for significant linkage: chromosome 2p25, near marker D2S168 (nonparametric linkage [NPL] score 3.77; P=.000761) at 21.70 cM, and 9p13, near marker D9S169 (NPL score 3.74; P=.000821) at 38.90 cM. In addition, there was a locus showing suggestive linkage at chromosome 4q32 between D4S413 and D4S3046 (NPL score 3.13; P=.003238) at 163.00 cM. In the present study the susceptibility locus on chromosome 2p25 is clearly different (21.70 cM) from the locus at 2p12 found in an Icelandic study (94.05 cM) and the locus at 2q23 (144.7 cM) found in an Australian/New Zealand study. The locus at 9p13 has been shown to be a candidate region for type 2 diabetes in two recently published genomewide scans from Finland and China. The regions on chromosomes 2p25 and 9p13 may harbor susceptibility genes for preeclampsia.
American Journal of Human Genetics | 2006
Ulla Hodgson; Ville Pulkkinen; Morag Dixon; Myriam Peyrard-Janvid; Marko Rehn; Päivi Lahermo; Vesa Ollikainen; Kaisa Salmenkivi; Vuokko L. Kinnula; Juha Kere; Pentti Tukiainen; Tarja Laitinen
We performed a genomewide scan in six multiplex families with familial idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) who originated from southeastern Finland. The majority of the Finnish multiplex families were clustered in the region, and the population history suggested that the clustering might be explained by an ancestor shared among the patients. The genomewide scan identified five loci of interest. The hierarchical fine mapping in an extended data set with 24 families originating from the same geographic region revealed a shared 110 kb to 13 Mb haplotype on chromosome 4q31, which was significantly more frequent among the patients than in population-based controls (odds ratio 6.3; 95% CI 2.5-15.9; P = .0001). The shared haplotype harbored two functionally uncharacterized genes, ELMOD2 and LOC152586, of which only ELMOD2 was expressed in lung and showed significantly decreased messenger-RNA expression in IPF lung (n = 6) when compared with that of healthy lung (n = 7; P = .05). Our results suggest ELMOD2 as a novel candidate gene for susceptibility in familial IPF.
European Journal of Human Genetics | 2001
Hannele Koillinen; Fung Ki Wong; Jorma Rautio; Vesa Ollikainen; Agneta Karsten; Ola Larson; Bin Tean Teh; Jan Huggare; Päivi Lahermo; Catharina Larsson; Juha Kere
The Van der Woude syndrome (VWS) is a dominantly inherited developmental disorder characterized by pits and/or sinuses of the lower lip, cleft lip and/or cleft palate. It is the most common cleft syndrome. VWS has shown remarkable genetic homogeneity in all populations, and so far, all families reported have been linked to 1q32-q41. A large Finnish pedigree with VWS was recently found to be unlinked to 1q32-q41. In order to map the disease locus in this family, a genome wide linkage scan was performed. A maximum lod score of 3.18 was obtained with the marker D1S2797, thus assigning the disease locus to chromosomal region 1p34. By analyses of meiotic recombinants an ∼30 cM region of shared haplotypes was identified. The results confirm the heterogeneity of the VWS syndrome, and they place the second disease locus in 1p34. This finding has a special interest because the phenotype in VWS closely resembles the phenotype in non-syndromic forms of cleft lip and palate.
Thorax | 2004
Vuokko L. Kinnula; S Lehtonen; P Koistinen; Sakari Kakko; Markku J. Savolainen; Juha Kere; Vesa Ollikainen; Tarja Laitinen
Background: Functional polymorphisms in the genes encoding superoxide dismutases (SOD)—that is, superoxide scavenging antioxidant enzymes—may play an important role in the development of inflammatory airway diseases such as asthma. Methods: The allele frequencies of two missense polymorphisms of SOD genes (Ala16Val in MnSOD (SOD2) and Arg213Gly in ECSOD (SOD3)) were investigated in Finnish patients with asthma and compared with family based controls. Both variants have been shown to be functionally interesting in the lung. The polymorphism at the exon–intron 3 boundary of a third SOD, CuZnSOD (SOD1), was also included in the analysis. Results: None of the SOD genetic variants studied appeared to be major genetic regulators in the development of asthma. We could exclude all models of inheritance that increased the risk of asthma more than 1.2 fold for MnSOD*Val (frequency of allele 0.74 in the population) and more than 6.6 fold for ECSOD*Gly213 (frequency of allele 0.03 in the population) compared with non-carriers. For the intronic polymorphism in CuZnSOD, a relative risk of more than 3.3 (frequency of allele 0.10 in the population) could be excluded. Conclusions: It is highly unlikely that the functionally important genetic variants Ala16Val and Arg213Gly of SODs play a major role in the genetic susceptibility of asthma.
Human Genetics | 2002
N. Woolley; P. Holopainen; Vesa Ollikainen; K. Mustalahti; Markku Mäki; Juha Kere; Jukka Partanen
Abstract. Coeliac disease is a common multifactorial disease with a strong genetic component, which is not entirely explained by the HLA association. Four previous whole-genome screens have produced somewhat inconsistent results suggesting genetic heterogeneity. We attempted to overcome this problem by performing a genome-wide scan in a Finnish sub-population, expected to be more homogeneous than the general population of Finland. The families in our study originate from the northeastern part of Finland, the Koilliskaira region, which has been relatively isolated since its founding in the 16th century. Genealogical studies have confirmed that the families share a common ancestor in the 16th century. Nine families with altogether 23 patients were genotyped for 399 microsatellite markers and the data were analysed with parametric linkage analysis using two dominant and one recessive model. A region on chromosome 15q11-q13 was implicated with a LOD score of 3.14 using a highly penetrant dominant model. Addition of more markers and one more sib-pair increased the LOD score to 3.74. This result gives preliminary evidence for existence of a susceptibility factor in this chromosomal region.
European Journal of Human Genetics | 2003
Paulina Paavola-Sakki; Vesa Ollikainen; Tiina Heliö; Leena Halme; Ulla Turunen; Päivi Lahermo; Maarit Lappalainen; Martti Färkkilä; Kimmo Kontula
Epidemiological and genetic linkage studies have indicated a strong genetic basis for development of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) which was recently supported by discovery of the Crohns disease (CD) susceptibility gene termed NOD2/CARD15. We carried out a genome-wide linkage study in Finnish IBD families, providing a particular advantage to map susceptibility genes for ulcerative colitis (UC) within a genetic isolate. Initially, 92 IBD families with 138 affected sib-pairs (ASPs), were genotyped for 429 markers spaced at approximately 10 cM intervals. Next, the loci on chromosomes 2p13-11, 11p12-q13, and 12p13-12 were high-density mapped in the extended family cohort of 130 families with 173 ASPs. In this study, the most significant lod scores were observed for the UC families on chromosome 2p11 (D2S2333), in the vicinity of the REG gene cluster which is strikingly overexpressed in the IBD mucosa. The maximum two-point lod score was 3.34 (dominant model), and the corresponding NPL score 2.61. For UC, the second highest two-point NPL score of 2.00 was observed at proximal 12p13, where also some evidence for linkage disequilibrium emerged (P=0.07 and P=0.007 for the basic and extended IBD cohorts, respectively). The highest two-point NPL score for the CD families was 2.34 at D12S78 (12q23) with significant evidence for linkage disequilibrium (P=0.004), and for the mixed (MX) families 2.07 at D4S406 near the linkage peak reported previously. This study confirmed several of the IBD loci that have previously been reported and gives evidence for new IBD loci on chromosomes 2p11, 11p12-q13, 12p13-12, 12q23, and 19q13.
IEEE/ACM Transactions on Computational Biology and Bioinformatics | 2006
Petteri Sevon; Hannu Toivonen; Vesa Ollikainen
We describe TreeDT, a novel association-based gene mapping method. Given a set of disease-associated haplotypes and a set of control haplotypes, TreeDT predicts likely locations of a disease susceptibility gene. TreeDT extracts, essentially in the form of haplotype trees, information about historical recombinations in the population: A haplotype tree constructed at a given chromosomal location is an estimate of the genealogy of the haplotypes. TreeDT constructs these trees for all locations on the given haplotypes and performs a novel disequilibrium test on each tree: Is there a small set of subtrees with relatively high proportions of disease-associated chromosomes, suggesting shared genetic history for those and a likely disease gene location? We give a detailed description of TreeDT and the tree disequilibrium tests, we analyze the algorithm formally, and we evaluate its performance experimentally on both simulated and real data sets. Experimental results demonstrate that TreeDT has high accuracy on difficult mapping tasks and comparisons to other methods (EATDT, HPM, TDT) show that TreeDT is very competitive
Journal of Medical Genetics | 2004
Sari Koskenmies; Päivi Lahermo; Heikki Julkunen; Vesa Ollikainen; Juha Kere; Elisabeth Widen
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is an autoimmune disease with diverse and variable clinical manifestations and unknown aetiology. Epidemiological and animal studies indicate that environmental and genetic factors are involved in the development of the disease. Several candidate gene loci (including the human leucocyte antigen ( HLA ) region, Fcγ receptors, and complement components) have been implicated through association studies, and multiple susceptibility loci have been detected in inbred mouse models of SLE.1,2 Until now, six groups have published genomewide scans with SLE as a phenotype in different ethnic groups.3–8 Recently, linkage to chromosome 2q37 (logarithm of odds (LOD) 4.24) in a Swedish population resulted in the identification of a new susceptibility gene PDCD1 in a large multinational study by Prokunina et al .8,9 The SLE associated allele of this immunoreceptor gene alters a binding site for the runt related transcription factor 1 ( RUNX1 ), which is found in an intronic enhancer. Stratification of pedigrees based on clinical manifestations has been used in recent studies that involved genomewide scans.10–16 The aim was to achieve genetically and clinically homogeneous sets of families and to increase the power to detect susceptibility genes for different subphenotypes of SLE. Altogether, 17 regions have been linked significantly to SLE with model based and non-parametric approaches; 11 of these in stratified studies. In addition, several other regions with suggestive linkage have been identified, but only some of those loci have been implicated in more than one study.6,18 The data suggest that multiple genes are involved in conferring susceptibility to SLE. In our study, we conducted a nationwide and genomewide scan for SLE susceptibility loci in Finnish families multiply affected by SLE. The extensive hospital registration system in Finland allowed us to identify and recruit approximately 85% of all patients with …