- Smith, Erin N;
- Koller, Daniel L;
- Panganiban, Corrie;
- Szelinger, Szabolcs;
- Zhang, Peng;
- Badner, Judith A;
- Barrett, Thomas B;
- Berrettini, Wade H;
- Bloss, Cinnamon S;
- Byerley, William;
- Coryell, William;
- Edenberg, Howard J;
- Foroud, Tatiana;
- Gershon, Elliot S;
- Greenwood, Tiffany A;
- Guo, Yiran;
- Hipolito, Maria;
- Keating, Brendan J;
- Lawson, William B;
- Liu, Chunyu;
- Mahon, Pamela B;
- McInnis, Melvin G;
- McMahon, Francis J;
- McKinney, Rebecca;
- Murray, Sarah S;
- Nievergelt, Caroline M;
- Nurnberger, John I;
- Nwulia, Evaristus A;
- Potash, James B;
- Rice, John;
- Schulze, Thomas G;
- Scheftner, William A;
- Shilling, Paul D;
- Zandi, Peter P;
- Zöllner, Sebastian;
- Craig, David W;
- Schork, Nicholas J;
- Kelsoe, John R
- Editor(s): Gibson, Greg
Although a highly heritable and disabling disease, bipolar disorder's (BD) genetic variants have been challenging to identify. We present new genotype data for 1,190 cases and 401 controls and perform a genome-wide association study including additional samples for a total of 2,191 cases and 1,434 controls. We do not detect genome-wide significant associations for individual loci; however, across all SNPs, we show an association between the power to detect effects calculated from a previous genome-wide association study and evidence for replication (P = 1.5×10(-7)). To demonstrate that this result is not likely to be a false positive, we analyze replication rates in a large meta-analysis of height and show that, in a large enough study, associations replicate as a function of power, approaching a linear relationship. Within BD, SNPs near exons exhibit a greater probability of replication, supporting an enrichment of reproducible associations near functional regions of genes. These results indicate that there is likely common genetic variation associated with BD near exons (±10 kb) that could be identified in larger studies and, further, provide a framework for assessing the potential for replication when combining results from multiple studies.