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Impact of cross-disorder polygenic risk on frontal brain activation with specific effect of schizophrenia risk

Evidence suggests that there is shared genetic aetiology across the major psychiatric disorders conferred by additive effects of many common variants. Measuring their joint effects on brain function may identify common neural risk mechanisms. We investigated the effects of a cross-disorder polygenic...

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Autores principales: Whalley, Heather C., Hall, Lynsey, Romaniuk, Liana, Macdonald, Alix, Lawrie, Stephen M., Sussmann, Jessika E., McIntosh, Andrew M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4396692/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25468172
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.schres.2014.10.046
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author Whalley, Heather C.
Hall, Lynsey
Romaniuk, Liana
Macdonald, Alix
Lawrie, Stephen M.
Sussmann, Jessika E.
McIntosh, Andrew M.
author_facet Whalley, Heather C.
Hall, Lynsey
Romaniuk, Liana
Macdonald, Alix
Lawrie, Stephen M.
Sussmann, Jessika E.
McIntosh, Andrew M.
author_sort Whalley, Heather C.
collection PubMed
description Evidence suggests that there is shared genetic aetiology across the major psychiatric disorders conferred by additive effects of many common variants. Measuring their joint effects on brain function may identify common neural risk mechanisms. We investigated the effects of a cross-disorder polygenic risk score (PGRS), based on additive effects of genetic susceptibility to the five major psychiatric disorders, on brain activation during performance of a language-based executive task. We examined this relationship in healthy individuals with (n = 82) and without (n = 57) a family history of bipolar disorder to determine whether this effect was additive or interactive dependent on the presence of family history. We demonstrate a significant interaction for polygenic loading × group in left lateral frontal cortex (BA9, BA6). Further examination indicated that this was driven by a significant positive correlation in those without a family history (i.e. healthy unrelated volunteers), with no significant relationships in the familial group. We then examined the effect of the individual diagnoses contributing to the PGRS to determine evidence of disorder-specificity. We found a significant association with the schizophrenia polygenic score only, with no other significant relationships. These findings indicate differences in left lateral frontal brain activation in association with increased cross-disorder PGRS in individuals without a family history of psychiatric illness. Lack of effects in the familial group may reflect epistatic effects, shared environmental influences or effects not captured by the PGRS. The specific relationship with loading for schizophrenia is notably consistent with frontal cortical inefficiency as a circumscribed phenotype of psychotic disorders.
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spelling pubmed-43966922015-04-17 Impact of cross-disorder polygenic risk on frontal brain activation with specific effect of schizophrenia risk Whalley, Heather C. Hall, Lynsey Romaniuk, Liana Macdonald, Alix Lawrie, Stephen M. Sussmann, Jessika E. McIntosh, Andrew M. Schizophr Res Article Evidence suggests that there is shared genetic aetiology across the major psychiatric disorders conferred by additive effects of many common variants. Measuring their joint effects on brain function may identify common neural risk mechanisms. We investigated the effects of a cross-disorder polygenic risk score (PGRS), based on additive effects of genetic susceptibility to the five major psychiatric disorders, on brain activation during performance of a language-based executive task. We examined this relationship in healthy individuals with (n = 82) and without (n = 57) a family history of bipolar disorder to determine whether this effect was additive or interactive dependent on the presence of family history. We demonstrate a significant interaction for polygenic loading × group in left lateral frontal cortex (BA9, BA6). Further examination indicated that this was driven by a significant positive correlation in those without a family history (i.e. healthy unrelated volunteers), with no significant relationships in the familial group. We then examined the effect of the individual diagnoses contributing to the PGRS to determine evidence of disorder-specificity. We found a significant association with the schizophrenia polygenic score only, with no other significant relationships. These findings indicate differences in left lateral frontal brain activation in association with increased cross-disorder PGRS in individuals without a family history of psychiatric illness. Lack of effects in the familial group may reflect epistatic effects, shared environmental influences or effects not captured by the PGRS. The specific relationship with loading for schizophrenia is notably consistent with frontal cortical inefficiency as a circumscribed phenotype of psychotic disorders. Elsevier 2015-02 /pmc/articles/PMC4396692/ /pubmed/25468172 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.schres.2014.10.046 Text en © 2014 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Whalley, Heather C.
Hall, Lynsey
Romaniuk, Liana
Macdonald, Alix
Lawrie, Stephen M.
Sussmann, Jessika E.
McIntosh, Andrew M.
Impact of cross-disorder polygenic risk on frontal brain activation with specific effect of schizophrenia risk
title Impact of cross-disorder polygenic risk on frontal brain activation with specific effect of schizophrenia risk
title_full Impact of cross-disorder polygenic risk on frontal brain activation with specific effect of schizophrenia risk
title_fullStr Impact of cross-disorder polygenic risk on frontal brain activation with specific effect of schizophrenia risk
title_full_unstemmed Impact of cross-disorder polygenic risk on frontal brain activation with specific effect of schizophrenia risk
title_short Impact of cross-disorder polygenic risk on frontal brain activation with specific effect of schizophrenia risk
title_sort impact of cross-disorder polygenic risk on frontal brain activation with specific effect of schizophrenia risk
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4396692/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25468172
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.schres.2014.10.046
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