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Título : Multisystem Component Phenotypes of Bipolar Disorder for Genetic Investigations of Extended Pedigrees.
Autor : Ospina Duque, Jorge
Fears, Scott C.
Service, Susan K.
Kremeyer, Barbara
Araya, Carmen
Bejarano, Julio
Ramírez, Margarita
Castrillón, Gabriel
Gómez Franco, Juliana
López, María C.
Montoya, Gabriel
Montoya, Patricia
Aldana, Ileana
Teshiba, Terri M.
Abaryan, Zvart
Al-Sharif, Noor B.
Ericson, Marissa
Jalbrzikowski, Maria
Luykx, Jurjen J.
Navarro, Linda
Tishler, Todd A.
Altshuler, Lori
Bartzokis, George
Escobar, Javier
Glahn, David C.
Risch, Neil
Ruiz Linares, Andrés
Thompson, Paul M.
Cantor, Rita M.
López Jaramillo, Carlos
Macaya, Gabriel
Molina, Julio
Reus, Víctor I.
Sabatti, Chiara
Freimer, Nelson B.
Bearden, Carrie E.
metadata.dc.subject.*: Bipolar Disorder
Trastorno Bipolar
Genetic Research
Investigación Genética
Genealogy and Heraldry
Genealogía y Heráldica
Fecha de publicación : 2014
Editorial : American Medical Association
Resumen : ABSTRACT: Importance: Genetic factors contribute to risk for bipolar disorder (BP), but its pathogenesis remains poorly understood. A focus on measuring multisystem quantitative traits that may be components of BP psychopathology may enable genetic dissection of this complex disorder, and investigation of extended pedigrees from genetically isolated populations may facilitate the detection of specific genetic variants that affect BP as well as its component phenotypes. Objective: To identify quantitative neurocognitive, temperament-related, and neuroanatomical phenotypes that appear heritable and associated with severe BP (bipolar I disorder [BP-I]) and therefore suitable for genetic linkage and association studies aimed at identifying variants contributing to BP-I risk. Design, Setting, and Participants: Multigenerational pedigree study in 2 closely related, genetically isolated populations: the Central Valley of Costa Rica and Antioquia, Colombia. A total of 738 individuals, all from Central Valley of Costa Rica and Antioquia pedigrees, participated; among them, 181 have BP-I. Main Outcomes and Measures: Familial aggregation (heritability) and association with BP-I of 169 quantitative neurocognitive, temperament, magnetic resonance imaging, and diffusion tensor imaging phenotypes. Results: Of 169 phenotypes investigated, 119 (70%) were significantly heritable and 51 (30%) were associated with BP-I. About one-quarter of the phenotypes, including measures from each phenotype domain, were both heritable and associated with BP-I. Neuroimaging phenotypes, particularly cortical thickness in prefrontal and temporal regions and volume of the corpus callosum, represented the most promising candidate traits for genetic mapping related to BP based on strong heritability and association with disease. Analyses of phenotypic and genetic covariation identified substantial correlations among the traits, at least some of which share a common underlying genetic architecture. Conclusions and Relevance: To our knowledge, this is the most extensive investigation of BP-relevant component phenotypes to date. Our results identify brain and behavioral quantitative traits that appear to be genetically influenced and show a pattern of BP-I association within families that is consistent with expectations from case-control studies. Together, these phenotypes provide a basis for identifying loci contributing to BP-I risk and for genetic dissection of the disorder.
metadata.dc.identifier.eissn: 2168-6238
ISSN : 2168-622X
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2013.4100
metadata.dc.identifier.url: https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamapsychiatry/fullarticle/1828736
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