Identification of Risk-Conferring Genes of Schizophrenia Using Endophenotypes

Schizophrenia is a complex disease predisposed by genes, environment and their interaction. Its diagnosis is mainly based on clinic observations with its treatment following a trial-and-error manner. Both linkage studies and following association studies have identified some genes and genomic regions which gain insight into pathophysiological foundation of the disease. However, low replication rate of detected variation between/within different populations prevented these findings from clinical application in the diagnosis and the precise treatment of disease. With introduction of endophenotypes and extended endpphenotypes, multiple disease-related traits such as neurocognitive deficits and neuroimaging alterations enable a further refinement of phenotypes used in genetic and genomic studies of schizophrenia. Here, the authors discuss the several endophenotypes emerging from their previous studies and the methods which could incorporate both the dichotomous variable of diagnosis and quantitative traits into genetic/genomic studies of schizophrenia. Furthermore, the authors demonstrated some alternative methodologies utilizing the big data generated from recent multi-sites cohort studies.



For more details Abstract: http://www.jneuropsychiatry.org/abstract/identification-of-riskconferring-genes-of-schizophrenia-using-endophenotypes-12065.html

Full Text Link: http://www.jneuropsychiatry.org/peer-review/identification-of-riskconferring-genes-of-schizophrenia-using-endophenotypes-12065.html

PDF Link: http://www.jneuropsychiatry.org/peer-review/identification-of-riskconferring-genes-of-schizophrenia-using-endophenotypes.pdf

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Four clinical cases of recurrent surgery addiction (polyoperes): diagnostic classification in the DSM-IV-TR vs DSM-5

Mental health organizations and the ostrich policy

In search of the pathophysiology and prevention of schizophrenia