As defined by the DSM-IV, BPD is highly heritable. There are substantial genetic and nonshared environmental correlations between mania and depression, but most of the genetic variance in liability to mania is specific to the manic syndrome.
Background: Previous twin studies have supported a genetic contribution to the major categories of psychotic disorders, but few of these have employed operational diagnostic criteria, and no such study has been based on a sample that included the full range of functional psychotic disorders.
If diagnostic hierarchies are relaxed, there is a degree of overlap in the genes contributing to RDC schizophrenic, schizoaffective, and manic syndromes. Supplementing the traditional approach of assigning a single main lifetime diagnosis with information on within-person comorbidity of psychotic syndromes may provide valuable information about the familial aggregation of psychotic symptoms.
Twin studies have been vital for establishing an important genetic contribution to the etiology of schizophrenia. The five newest studies since 1995 from Europe and Japan have confirmed earlier findings. They yielded probandwise concordance rates of 41-65% in monozygotic (MZ) pairs and 0-28% in dizygotic (DZ) pairs, and heritability estimates of approximately 80-85%. Twin studies are also valuable for investigating the etiological relationships between schizophrenia and other disorders, and the genetic basis of clinical heterogeneity within schizophrenia. Studies of discordant MZ pairs provide further insights into non-inherited factors that contribute to the multifactorial etiology of this disorder. More recently, twin studies have begun to be used to directly investigate molecular genetic and epigenetic processes underlying schizophrenia.
We aimed to characterize multiple psychotic experiences, each assessed on a spectrum of severity (ie, quantitatively), in a general population sample of adolescents. Over five thousand 16-year-old twins and their parents completed the newly devised Specific Psychotic Experiences Questionnaire (SPEQ); a subsample repeated it approximately 9 months later. SPEQ was investigated in terms of factor structure, intersubscale correlations, frequency of endorsement and reported distress, reliability and validity, associations with traits of anxiety, depression and personality, and sex differences. Principal component analysis revealed a 6-component solution: paranoia, hallucinations, cognitive disorganization, grandiosity, anhedonia, and parent-rated negative symptoms. These components formed the basis of 6 subscales. Correlations between different experiences were low to moderate. All SPEQ subscales, except Grandiosity, correlated significantly with traits of anxiety, depression, and neuroticism. Scales showed good internal consistency, test-retest reliability, and convergent validity. Girls endorsed more paranoia, hallucinations, and cognitive disorganization; boys reported more grandiosity and anhedonia and had more parent-rated negative symptoms. As in adults at high risk for psychosis and with psychotic disorders, psychotic experiences in adolescents are characterized by multiple components. The study of psychotic experiences as distinct dimensional quantitative traits is likely to prove an important strategy for future research, and the SPEQ is a self- and parent-report questionnaire battery that embodies this approach.
Twin studies have been vital for establishing an important genetic contribution to the etiology of schizophrenia. The five newest studies since 1995 from Europe and Japan have confirmed earlier findings. They yielded probandwise concordance rates of 41-65% in monozygotic (MZ) pairs and 0-28% in dizygotic (DZ) pairs, and heritability estimates of approximately 80-85%. Twin studies are also valuable for investigating the etiological relationships between schizophrenia and other disorders, and the genetic basis of clinical heterogeneity within schizophrenia. Studies of discordant MZ pairs provide further insights into non-inherited factors that contribute to the multifactorial etiology of this disorder. More recently, twin studies have begun to be used to directly investigate molecular genetic and epigenetic processes underlying schizophrenia.
Several studies have shown an association between schizophrenia and the C allele of a T-C polymorphism at nucleotide 102 and the 5HT2A receptor gene. In the present study we observed this association in a sample of 63 parent/offspring trios where the proband received a diagnosis of DSM-III-R schizophrenia using TDT analysis ( 2 = 6.26, P = 0.006, 2 = 9.00, P = 0.001 when one affected offspring was selected at random from each family, suggesting that the results are due to association rather than linkage). There was no significant difference between the transmission of C102 from heterozygous fathers and mothers, which fails to support a role for genomic imprinting in this effect. T102C does not result in an alteration of the amino acid sequence of the protein. We therefore screened the promoter of 5HT2A for polymorphisms using single-strand confirmation polymorphism analysis. An A-G polymorphism at −1438 that creates an HpaII restriction site was identified. This was found to be in complete linkage disequilibrium with T102C and is hence a candidate for the pathogenic variant in schizophrenia. Functional analysis of A-1438G using luciferase assay demonstrated significant basal promoter activity in 5HT2A expressing HeLa cells by both the A and G variants. However, comparison of the A and G variants showed no significant differences in basal activity nor when promoter activity was induced by cAMP and protein kinase C-dependent mechanisms.Keywords: schizophrenia; 5HT2A; serotonin receptor; 5HT2A receptor; genetics; allelic association Introduction genetic associations can lead to both false positive and false negative findings if there is population stratifiSeveral studies have shown an association between cation. Although attempts were made in most of the schizophrenia and allele 2 (C) of a T-C polymorphism previous studies to match for ethnicity, it is still possat nucleotide 102 in the 5HT2A receptor gene. [1][2][3] ible that stratification effects occurred. Family-based Although the odds ratios are small (1.7 for possession association designs overcome problems of stratifiof one or more copies of allele 2 2 ), the attributable fraccation. 11 Accordingly, we obtained DNA from parents tion is relatively high (0.35), because allele 2 is comof our original sample where available 2 and from mon in the general population. This association is additional parent/affected-offspring trios. In addition, therefore potentially of considerable therapeutic this approach has also allowed us to test for parentimportance. Some studies have failed to replicate these of-origin effects, a possibility highlighted by a recent findings, but they have all been small and lack of demonstration of genomic inprinting at this locus. 12 power 4-9 is one explanation for their failure to demonThe T102C polymorphism does not result in alterstrate a significant association. Indeed the results of a ation of the amino-acid sequence of the protein. It is recent meta-analysis including all published studies therefore likely that this polymorphism is no...
Context The onset of psychosis is usually preceded by psychotic experiences, but little is known about their causes. The present study investigated the degree of genetic and environmental influences on specific psychotic experiences, assessed dimensionally, in adolescence in the community and in individuals with many, frequent experiences (defined using quantitative cut-offs). The degree of overlap in etiological influences between specific psychotic experiences was also investigated Objective Investigate degree of genetic and environmental influences on specific psychotic experiences, assessed dimensionally, in adolescence in the community and in individuals having many, frequent experiences (defined using quantitative cut-offs). Test degree of overlap in etiological influences between specific psychotic experiences. Design Classic twin design. Structural equation model-fitting. Univariate and bivariate twin models, liability threshold models, DeFries-Fulker extremes analysis and the Cherny Method. Setting Representative community sample of twins from England and Wales. Participants 5059 adolescent twin pairs (Mean age: 16.31 yrs, SD: 0.68 yrs). Main outcome measure Psychotic experiences assessed as quantitative traits (self-rated paranoia, hallucinations, cognitive disorganization, grandiosity, anhedonia; parent-rated negative symptoms). Results Genetic influences were apparent for all psychotic experiences (15-59%) with modest shared environment for hallucinations and negative symptoms (17-24%) and significant nonshared environment (49-64% for the self-rated scales, 17% for Parent-rated Negative Symptoms). Three different empirical approaches converged to suggest that the etiology in extreme groups (most extreme-scoring 5%, 10% and 15%) did not differ significantly from that of the whole distribution. There was no linear change in the heritability across the distribution of psychotic experiences, with the exception of a modest increase in heritability for increasing severity of parent-rated negative symptoms. Of the psychotic experiences that showed covariation, this appeared to be due to shared genetic influences (bivariate heritabilities = .54-.71). Conclusions and Relevance These findings are consistent with the concept of a psychosis continuum, suggesting that the same genetic and environmental factors influence both extreme, frequent psychotic experiences and milder, less frequent manifestations in adolescents. Individual psychotic experiences in adolescence, assessed quantitatively, have lower heritability estimates and higher estimates of nonshared environment than those for the liability to schizophrenia. Heritability varies by type of psychotic experience, being highest for paranoia and parent-rated negative symptoms, and lowest for hallucinations.
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