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1.
Sci Rep ; 7(1): 17141, 2017 12 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29215023

ABSTRACT

Physiological function, disease expression and drug effects vary by time-of-day. Clock disruption in mice results in cardio-metabolic, immunological and neurological dysfunction; circadian misalignment using forced desynchrony increases cardiovascular risk factors in humans. Here we integrated data from remote sensors, physiological and multi-omics analyses to assess the feasibility of detecting time dependent signals - the chronobiome - despite the "noise" attributable to the behavioral differences of free-living human volunteers. The majority (62%) of sensor readouts showed time-specific variability including the expected variation in blood pressure, heart rate, and cortisol. While variance in the multi-omics is dominated by inter-individual differences, temporal patterns are evident in the metabolome (5.4% in plasma, 5.6% in saliva) and in several genera of the oral microbiome. This demonstrates, despite a small sample size and limited sampling, the feasibility of characterizing at scale the human chronobiome "in the wild". Such reference data at scale are a prerequisite to detect and mechanistically interpret discordant data derived from patients with temporal patterns of disease expression, to develop time-specific therapeutic strategies and to refine existing treatments.


Subject(s)
Circadian Rhythm , Metabolome , Microbiota , Proteome , Transcriptome , Adult , Blood Pressure , Blood Proteins/metabolism , Heart Rate , Humans , Hydrocortisone/metabolism , Male , Mouth/metabolism , Pilot Projects , Saliva/metabolism , Time Factors
2.
Hum Mol Genet ; 25(2): 389-403, 2016 Jan 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26604143

ABSTRACT

A large number of genetic loci are associated with adult body mass index. However, the genetics of childhood body mass index are largely unknown. We performed a meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies of childhood body mass index, using sex- and age-adjusted standard deviation scores. We included 35 668 children from 20 studies in the discovery phase and 11 873 children from 13 studies in the replication phase. In total, 15 loci reached genome-wide significance (P-value < 5 × 10(-8)) in the joint discovery and replication analysis, of which 12 are previously identified loci in or close to ADCY3, GNPDA2, TMEM18, SEC16B, FAIM2, FTO, TFAP2B, TNNI3K, MC4R, GPR61, LMX1B and OLFM4 associated with adult body mass index or childhood obesity. We identified three novel loci: rs13253111 near ELP3, rs8092503 near RAB27B and rs13387838 near ADAM23. Per additional risk allele, body mass index increased 0.04 Standard Deviation Score (SDS) [Standard Error (SE) 0.007], 0.05 SDS (SE 0.008) and 0.14 SDS (SE 0.025), for rs13253111, rs8092503 and rs13387838, respectively. A genetic risk score combining all 15 SNPs showed that each additional average risk allele was associated with a 0.073 SDS (SE 0.011, P-value = 3.12 × 10(-10)) increase in childhood body mass index in a population of 1955 children. This risk score explained 2% of the variance in childhood body mass index. This study highlights the shared genetic background between childhood and adult body mass index and adds three novel loci. These loci likely represent age-related differences in strength of the associations with body mass index.


Subject(s)
Body Mass Index , Genome-Wide Association Study , Obesity/genetics , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide , Adolescent , Adult , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Genetic Loci , Humans , Male , Risk , White People/genetics , Young Adult
3.
Nat Commun ; 5: 4831, 2014 Sep 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25226531

ABSTRACT

Twin studies suggest that expressive vocabulary at ~24 months is modestly heritable. However, the genes influencing this early linguistic phenotype are unknown. Here we conduct a genome-wide screen and follow-up study of expressive vocabulary in toddlers of European descent from up to four studies of the EArly Genetics and Lifecourse Epidemiology consortium, analysing an early (15-18 months, 'one-word stage', N(Total) = 8,889) and a later (24-30 months, 'two-word stage', N(Total)=10,819) phase of language acquisition. For the early phase, one single-nucleotide polymorphism (rs7642482) at 3p12.3 near ROBO2, encoding a conserved axon-binding receptor, reaches the genome-wide significance level (P=1.3 × 10(-8)) in the combined sample. This association links language-related common genetic variation in the general population to a potential autism susceptibility locus and a linkage region for dyslexia, speech-sound disorder and reading. The contribution of common genetic influences is, although modest, supported by genome-wide complex trait analysis (meta-GCTA h(2)(15-18-months) = 0.13, meta-GCTA h(2)(24-30-months) = 0.14) and in concordance with additional twin analysis (5,733 pairs of European descent, h(2)(24-months) = 0.20).


Subject(s)
Autistic Disorder/genetics , Dyslexia/genetics , Language Development , Language Disorders/genetics , Quantitative Trait Loci , Receptors, Immunologic/genetics , Autistic Disorder/ethnology , Autistic Disorder/physiopathology , Child, Preschool , Chromosome Mapping , Dyslexia/ethnology , Dyslexia/physiopathology , Female , Gene Expression , Genetic Linkage , Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Genome-Wide Association Study , Humans , Infant , Language , Language Disorders/ethnology , Language Disorders/physiopathology , Male , Phenotype , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide , Speech/physiology , Speech Sound Disorder , Vocabulary , White People
4.
Nat Commun ; 5: 4204, 2014 Jul 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25003214

ABSTRACT

Dissecting how genetic and environmental influences impact on learning is helpful for maximizing numeracy and literacy. Here we show, using twin and genome-wide analysis, that there is a substantial genetic component to children's ability in reading and mathematics, and estimate that around one half of the observed correlation in these traits is due to shared genetic effects (so-called Generalist Genes). Thus, our results highlight the potential role of the learning environment in contributing to differences in a child's cognitive abilities at age twelve.


Subject(s)
Dyslexia/genetics , Genetics, Population , Mathematics , Quantitative Trait, Heritable , Reading , Twins/genetics , Child , Dyslexia/psychology , Female , Genome-Wide Association Study , Humans , Learning , Male , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide , Twins/psychology , United Kingdom
5.
J Speech Lang Hear Res ; 57(1): 96-105, 2014 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24687471

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Researchers have previously shown that individual differences in measures of receptive language ability at age 12 are highly heritable. In the current study, the authors attempted to identify some of the genes responsible for the heritability of receptive language ability using a genome-wide association approach. METHOD: The authors administered 4 Internet-based measures of receptive language (vocabulary, semantics, syntax, and pragmatics) to a sample of 2,329 twelve-year-olds for whom DNA and genome-wide genotyping were available. Nearly 700,000 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and 1 million imputed SNPs were included in a genome-wide association analysis of receptive language composite scores. RESULTS: No SNP associations met the demanding criterion of genome-wide significance that corrects for multiple testing across the genome ( p < 5 × 10 -8). The strongest SNP association did not replicate in an additional sample of 2,639 twelve-year-olds. CONCLUSIONS: These results indicate that individual differences in receptive language ability in the general population do not reflect common genetic variants that account for more than 3% of the phenotypic variance. The search for genetic variants associated with language skill will require larger samples and additional methods to identify and functionally characterize the full spectrum of risk variants.


Subject(s)
Child Language , Genome-Wide Association Study , Language Development Disorders/epidemiology , Language Development Disorders/genetics , Language Development , Child , Female , Genotype , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Phenotype , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide , Semantics , Vocabulary
6.
J Abnorm Child Psychol ; 42(1): 127-36, 2014 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23839718

ABSTRACT

Both shared and unique genetic risk factors underlie the two symptom domains of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD): inattention and hyperactivity-impulsivity. The developmental course and relationship to co-occurring disorders differs across the two symptom domains, highlighting the importance of their partially distinct etiologies. Familial cognitive impairment factors have been identified in ADHD, but whether they show specificity in relation to the two ADHD symptom domains remains poorly understood. We aimed to investigate whether different cognitive impairments are genetically linked to the ADHD symptom domains of inattention versus hyperactivity-impulsivity. We conducted multivariate genetic model fitting analyses on ADHD symptom scores and cognitive data, from go/no-go and fast tasks, collected on a population twin sample of 1,312 children aged 7-10. Reaction time variability (RTV) showed substantial genetic overlap with inattention, as observed in an additive genetic correlation of 0.64, compared to an additive genetic correlation of 0.31 with hyperactivity-impulsivity. Commission errors (CE) showed low additive genetic correlations with both hyperactivity-impulsivity and inattention (genetic correlations of 0.17 and 0.11, respectively). The additive genetic correlation between RTV and CE was also low and non-significant at -0.10, consistent with the etiological separation between the two indices of cognitive impairments. Overall, two key cognitive impairments phenotypically associated with ADHD symptoms, captured by RTV and CE, showed different genetic relationships to the two ADHD symptom domains. The findings extend a previous model of two familial cognitive impairment factors in combined subtype ADHD by separating pathways underlying inattention and hyperactivity-impulsivity symptoms.


Subject(s)
Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity , Attention , Cognition Disorders , Impulsive Behavior/psychology , Attention/physiology , Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity/genetics , Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity/physiopathology , Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity/psychology , Child , Cognition Disorders/genetics , Cognition Disorders/physiopathology , Cognition Disorders/psychology , Comorbidity , Female , Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Humans , Male , Multivariate Analysis , Psychiatric Status Rating Scales , Reaction Time/physiology , Risk Factors , Twins
7.
Dev Psychopathol ; 25(4 Pt 2): 1225-42, 2013 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24342837

ABSTRACT

The disciplines of developmental psychopathology and behavior genetics are concerned with many of the same questions about the etiology and course of normal and abnormal behavior and about the factors that promote typical development despite the presence of risk. The goal of this paper is to summarize how research in behavior genetics has shed light on questions that are central to developmental psychopathology. We briefly review the origins of behavior genetics, summarize the findings that have been gleaned from several decades of quantitative and molecular genetics research, and describe future directions for research that will delineate gene function as well as pathways from genes to brain to behavior. The importance of environmental contributions, at both genetic and epigenetic levels, will be discussed. We conclude that behavior genetics has made significant contributions to developmental psychopathology by documenting the interplay among risk and protective factors at multiple levels of the organism, by clarifying the causal status of risk exposures, and by identifying factors that account for change and stability in psychopathology. As the tools to identify gene function become increasingly sophisticated, and as behavioral geneticists become increasingly interdisciplinary in their scope, the field is poised to make ever greater contributions to our understanding of typical and atypical development.


Subject(s)
Brain/physiopathology , Child Development/physiology , Child Psychiatry , Genetics, Behavioral/trends , Mental Disorders/genetics , Child , Gene-Environment Interaction , Humans , Mental Disorders/physiopathology
8.
PLoS One ; 8(7): e65789, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23874384

ABSTRACT

Callous-unemotional behavior (CU) is currently under consideration as a subtyping index for conduct disorder diagnosis. Twin studies routinely estimate the heritability of CU as greater than 50%. It is now possible to estimate genetic influence using DNA alone from samples of unrelated individuals, not relying on the assumptions of the twin method. Here we use this new DNA method (implemented in a software package called Genome-wide Complex Trait Analysis, GCTA) for the first time to estimate genetic influence on CU. We also report the first genome-wide association (GWA) study of CU as a quantitative trait. We compare these DNA results to those from twin analyses using the same measure and the same community sample of 2,930 children rated by their teachers at ages 7, 9 and 12. GCTA estimates of heritability were near zero, even though twin analysis of CU in this sample confirmed the high heritability of CU reported in the literature, and even though GCTA estimates of heritability were substantial for cognitive and anthropological traits in this sample. No significant associations were found in GWA analysis, which, like GCTA, only detects additive effects of common DNA variants. The phrase 'missing heritability' was coined to refer to the gap between variance associated with DNA variants identified in GWA studies versus twin study heritability. However, GCTA heritability, not twin study heritability, is the ceiling for GWA studies because both GCTA and GWA are limited to the overall additive effects of common DNA variants, whereas twin studies are not. This GCTA ceiling is very low for CU in our study, despite its high twin study heritability estimate. The gap between GCTA and twin study heritabilities will make it challenging to identify genes responsible for the heritability of CU.


Subject(s)
Conduct Disorder/genetics , Child , Female , Genome-Wide Association Study , Humans , Male , Models, Genetic , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide , Quantitative Trait Loci , Quantitative Trait, Heritable , Software
9.
Psychol Sci ; 24(4): 562-8, 2013 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23501967

ABSTRACT

For nearly a century, twin and adoption studies have yielded substantial estimates of heritability for cognitive abilities, although it has proved difficult for genomewide-association studies to identify the genetic variants that account for this heritability (i.e., the missing-heritability problem). However, a new approach, genomewide complex-trait analysis (GCTA), forgoes the identification of individual variants to estimate the total heritability captured by common DNA markers on genotyping arrays. In the same sample of 3,154 pairs of 12-year-old twins, we directly compared twin-study heritability estimates for cognitive abilities (language, verbal, nonverbal, and general) with GCTA estimates captured by 1.7 million DNA markers. We found that DNA markers tagged by the array accounted for .66 of the estimated heritability, reaffirming that cognitive abilities are heritable. Larger sample sizes alone will be sufficient to identify many of the genetic variants that influence cognitive abilities.


Subject(s)
Cognition/physiology , Twins, Dizygotic/genetics , Twins, Monozygotic/genetics , Child , Genetic Markers , Genome-Wide Association Study , Genotype , Humans , Intelligence/genetics , Phenotype , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide , Twins, Dizygotic/psychology , Twins, Monozygotic/psychology
10.
Dev Psychopathol ; 24(4): 1253-64, 2012 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23062295

ABSTRACT

The significance of genotype-environment interplay is its focus on how causal factors, whether environmental or genetic, have their effects. It is difficult to establish causality in observational research because of the potential for reverse causation and confounding. Most environmental measures are heritable, which means that their effects on the risk for psychopathology are potentially confounded by genotype. In contrast, genetic influences on psychopathology may be mediated by their effect on environmental exposures. The existence of genetic influences on putative environmental risk factors offers both possibilities and pitfalls for research into environmental epidemiology. We use the example of parenting and its influence on childhood externalizing problems to review how genotype-environment correlations can be exploited to demonstrate causal processes in pyschopathology.


Subject(s)
Gene-Environment Interaction , Mental Disorders , Adult , Child , Child Behavior , Genotype , Humans , Maternal Behavior , Mental Disorders/etiology , Mental Disorders/genetics , Social Environment
12.
Arthritis Rheum ; 63(3): 850-9, 2011 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21360514

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To investigate whether low-dose naproxen sodium (220 mg twice a day) interferes with aspirin's antiplatelet effect in healthy subjects. METHODS: We performed a crossover, open-label study in 9 healthy volunteers. They received for 6 days 3 different treatments separated by 14 days of washout: 1) naproxen 2 hours before aspirin, 2) aspirin 2 hours before naproxen, and 3) aspirin alone. The primary end point was the assessment of serum thromboxane B(2) (TXB(2)) 24 hours after the administration of naproxen 2 hours before aspirin on day 6 of treatment. In 5 volunteers, the rate of recovery of TXB(2) generation (up to 72 hours after drug discontinuation) was assessed in serum and in platelet-rich plasma stimulated with arachidonic acid (AA) or collagen. RESULTS: Twenty-four hours after the last dosing on day 6 in volunteers receiving aspirin alone or aspirin before naproxen, serum TXB(2) was almost completely inhibited (median [range] 99.1% [97.4-99.4%] and 99.1% [98.0-99.7%], respectively). Naproxen given before aspirin caused a slightly lower inhibition of serum TXB(2) (median [range] 98.0% [90.6-99.4%]) than aspirin alone (P = 0.0007) or aspirin before naproxen (P = 0.0045). All treatments produced a maximal inhibition of AA-induced platelet aggregation. At 24 hours, compared with baseline, collagen-induced platelet aggregation was still inhibited by aspirin alone (P = 0.0003), but not by aspirin given 2 hours before or after naproxen. Compared with administration of aspirin alone, the sequential administration of naproxen and aspirin caused a significant parallel upward shift of the regression lines describing the recovery of platelet TXB(2). CONCLUSION: Sequential administration of 220 mg naproxen twice a day and low-dose aspirin interferes with the irreversible inhibition of platelet cyclooxygenase 1 afforded by aspirin. The interaction was smaller when giving naproxen 2 hours after aspirin. The clinical consequences of these 2 schedules of administration of aspirin with naproxen remain to be studied in randomized clinical trials.


Subject(s)
Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal/administration & dosage , Aspirin/administration & dosage , Blood Platelets/drug effects , Naproxen/administration & dosage , Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors/administration & dosage , Adult , Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal/adverse effects , Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal/blood , Arachidonic Acid/pharmacology , Aspirin/adverse effects , Aspirin/blood , Collagen/pharmacology , Cross-Over Studies , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Drug Interactions , Female , Humans , Male , Naproxen/adverse effects , Naproxen/blood , Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors/adverse effects , Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors/blood , Platelet-Rich Plasma/drug effects , Reference Values , Thromboxane B2/blood , Young Adult
13.
Child Dev ; 81(1): 101-14, 2010.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20331656

ABSTRACT

Maternal smoking during pregnancy retards fetal growth and depresses infant birth weight. The magnitude of these effects may be moderated by fetal genotype. The current study investigated maternal smoking, fetal genotype, and fetal growth in a large population sample of dizygotic twins. Maternal smoking retarded fetal growth in a dose-dependent fashion. In a subsample of 497 twin pairs whose mothers smoked during pregnancy, a functional polymorphism in the NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase gene (NQO1 Pro187Ser; rs1800566) was significantly associated with fetal growth within families. The effect was strongest among moderate smokers. This is the first demonstration that fetal genotype for an enzyme involved in tobacco smoke metabolism influences intrauterine growth independent of maternal genotype. Future studies should conduct formal tests of Fetal Genotype x Maternal Smoking interactions.


Subject(s)
Fetal Development/genetics , Fetal Growth Retardation/genetics , Fetus/metabolism , Mothers , NAD(P)H Dehydrogenase (Quinone)/genetics , Smoking/adverse effects , Female , Fetal Development/physiology , Fetal Growth Retardation/etiology , Genotype , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Male , Maternal Exposure/adverse effects , Polymorphism, Genetic , Pregnancy , Twins, Dizygotic/genetics , Twins, Dizygotic/metabolism
14.
Arch Gen Psychiatry ; 66(9): 978-85, 2009 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19736354

ABSTRACT

CONTEXT: A previous study reported a gene x environment interaction in which a haplotype in the corticotropin-releasing hormone receptor 1 gene (CRHR1) was associated with protection against adult depressive symptoms in individuals who were maltreated as children (as assessed by the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire [CTQ]). OBJECTIVE: To replicate the interaction between childhood maltreatment and a TAT haplotype formed by rs7209436, rs110402, and rs242924 in CRHR1, predicting adult depression. DESIGN: Two prospective longitudinal cohort studies. SETTING: England and New Zealand. PARTICIPANTS: Participants in the first sample were women in the E-Risk Study (N = 1116), followed up to age 40 years with 96% retention. Participants in the second sample were men and women in the Dunedin Study (N = 1037), followed up to age 32 years with 96% retention. Main Outcome Measure Research diagnoses of past-year and recurrent major depressive disorder. RESULTS: In the E-Risk Study, the TAT haplotype was associated with a significant protective effect. In this effect, women who reported childhood maltreatment on the CTQ were protected against depression. In the Dunedin Study, which used a different type of measure of maltreatment, this finding was not replicated. CONCLUSIONS: A haplotype in CRHR1 has been suggested to exert a protective effect against adult depression among research participants who reported maltreatment on the CTQ, a measure that elicits emotional memories. This suggests the hypothesis that CRHR1's protective effect may relate to its function in the consolidation of memories of emotionally arousing experiences.


Subject(s)
Child Abuse/statistics & numerical data , Depressive Disorder/genetics , Genetic Variation/genetics , Life Change Events , Receptors, Corticotropin-Releasing Hormone/genetics , Adult , Child , Child Abuse/psychology , Child Abuse, Sexual/psychology , Child Abuse, Sexual/statistics & numerical data , Child, Preschool , Corticotropin-Releasing Hormone/genetics , Depressive Disorder/diagnosis , Depressive Disorder/prevention & control , Female , Genotype , Haplotypes/genetics , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Polymorphism, Genetic , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide , Psychiatric Status Rating Scales , Surveys and Questionnaires
15.
PLoS One ; 3(10): e3583, 2008.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18974833

ABSTRACT

A wealth of genetic associations for cardiovascular and metabolic phenotypes in humans has been accumulating over the last decade, in particular a large number of loci derived from recent genome wide association studies (GWAS). True complex disease-associated loci often exert modest effects, so their delineation currently requires integration of diverse phenotypic data from large studies to ensure robust meta-analyses. We have designed a gene-centric 50 K single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) array to assess potentially relevant loci across a range of cardiovascular, metabolic and inflammatory syndromes. The array utilizes a "cosmopolitan" tagging approach to capture the genetic diversity across approximately 2,000 loci in populations represented in the HapMap and SeattleSNPs projects. The array content is informed by GWAS of vascular and inflammatory disease, expression quantitative trait loci implicated in atherosclerosis, pathway based approaches and comprehensive literature searching. The custom flexibility of the array platform facilitated interrogation of loci at differing stringencies, according to a gene prioritization strategy that allows saturation of high priority loci with a greater density of markers than the existing GWAS tools, particularly in African HapMap samples. We also demonstrate that the IBC array can be used to complement GWAS, increasing coverage in high priority CVD-related loci across all major HapMap populations. DNA from over 200,000 extensively phenotyped individuals will be genotyped with this array with a significant portion of the generated data being released into the academic domain facilitating in silico replication attempts, analyses of rare variants and cross-cohort meta-analyses in diverse populations. These datasets will also facilitate more robust secondary analyses, such as explorations with alternative genetic models, epistasis and gene-environment interactions.


Subject(s)
Cardiovascular Diseases/genetics , Genome-Wide Association Study/methods , Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis/methods , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide , Cardiovascular Diseases/ethnology , Concept Formation , Gene Frequency , Genome-Wide Association Study/instrumentation , Genotype , Humans , Population Groups/genetics , Quality Control , Research Design
16.
Dev Psychol ; 44(2): 305-15, 2008 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18331124

ABSTRACT

The classical twin study provides a useful resource for testing hypotheses about how the family environment influences children's development, including how genes can influence sensitivity to environmental effects. However, existing statistical models do not account for the possibility that children can inherit exposure to family environments (i.e., passive gene-environment correlation). The authors introduce a method to simultaneously estimate the effects of passive gene- environment correlation and gene- environment interaction and use it to investigate the relationship between chaos in the home and verbal ability in a large sample of 4-year-old twins.


Subject(s)
Diseases in Twins/genetics , Family/psychology , Genotype , Language Development Disorders/genetics , Social Environment , Aptitude , Child, Preschool , Diseases in Twins/psychology , Female , Genetic Predisposition to Disease/genetics , Genetic Predisposition to Disease/psychology , Humans , Language Development Disorders/psychology , Male , Models, Statistical , Nonlinear Dynamics , Statistics as Topic , Twins, Dizygotic/genetics , Twins, Dizygotic/psychology , Twins, Monozygotic/genetics , Twins, Monozygotic/psychology , Verbal Behavior , Vocabulary
17.
Mol Cell Proteomics ; 7(5): 981-94, 2008 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18212345

ABSTRACT

The model organism zebrafish (Danio rerio) is particularly amenable to studies deciphering regulatory genetic networks in vertebrate development, biology, and pharmacology. Unraveling the functional dynamics of such networks requires precise quantitation of protein expression during organismal growth, which is incrementally challenging with progressive complexity of the systems. In an approach toward such quantitative studies of dynamic network behavior, we applied mass spectrometric methodology and rigorous statistical analysis to create comprehensive, high quality profiles of proteins expressed at two stages of zebrafish development. Proteins of embryos 72 and 120 h postfertilization (hpf) were isolated and analyzed both by two-dimensional (2D) LC followed by ESI-MS/MS and by 2D PAGE followed by MALDI-TOF/TOF protein identification. We detected 1384 proteins from 327,906 peptide sequence identifications at 72 and 120 hpf with false identification rates of less than 1% using 2D LC-ESI-MS/MS. These included only approximately 30% of proteins that were identified by 2D PAGE-MALDI-TOF/TOF. Roughly 10% of all detected proteins were derived from hypothetical or predicted gene models or were entirely unannotated. Comparison of proteins expression by 2D DIGE revealed that proteins involved in energy production and transcription/translation were relatively more abundant at 72 hpf consistent with faster synthesis of cellular proteins during organismal growth at this time compared with 120 hpf. The data are accessible in a database that links protein identifications to existing resources including the Zebrafish Information Network database. This new resource should facilitate the selection of candidate proteins for targeted quantitation and refine systematic genetic network analysis in vertebrate development and biology.


Subject(s)
Proteome/analysis , Proteomics , Zebrafish Proteins/analysis , Zebrafish/embryology , Animals , Chromatography, Liquid , Databases, Protein , Electrophoresis, Gel, Two-Dimensional , Embryonic Development , Proteome/genetics , Proteome/metabolism , Spectrometry, Mass, Electrospray Ionization , Zebrafish/genetics , Zebrafish/metabolism , Zebrafish Proteins/genetics , Zebrafish Proteins/metabolism
18.
Psychiatry ; 7(12): 496-499, 2008 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20622930

ABSTRACT

Psychosocial risk factors for psychiatric illness are moderately heritable. This has two implications: first, that individuals actively shape their environments through heritable behaviour; second, that the relationship between environmental exposure and psychopathology may be confounded by genotype. We define three types of genotype-environment correlation (passive, evocative, and active), describe the evidence from quantitative and molecular genetic studies for their existence, and discuss the implications of genotype-environment correlations for the prevention and treatment of psychiatric disorder. Research designs are needed that can test which exposures have truly causal effects on mental illness and which are confounded by genotype, so that clinicians can make informed decisions about when modifying exposures will be likely to result in reductions in mental illness. By considering bi-directional and reciprocal relations between risk exposures and patients' behaviour, clinicians may develop a fuller picture of the causes of disorder and develop more effective treatment methods.

19.
Mol Cell Proteomics ; 6(3): 527-36, 2007 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17164401

ABSTRACT

MS/MS combined with database search methods can identify the proteins present in complex mixtures. High throughput methods that infer probable peptide sequences from enzymatically digested protein samples create a challenge in how best to aggregate the evidence for candidate proteins. Typically the results of multiple technical and/or biological replicate experiments must be combined to maximize sensitivity. We present a statistical method for estimating probabilities of protein expression that integrates peptide sequence identifications from multiple search algorithms and replicate experimental runs. The method was applied to create a repository of 797 non-homologous zebrafish (Danio rerio) proteins, at an empirically validated false identification rate under 1%, as a resource for the development of targeted quantitative proteomics assays. We have implemented this statistical method as an analytic module that can be integrated with an existing suite of open-source proteomics software.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Fish Proteins/analysis , Models, Statistical , Proteomics/methods , Animals , Chromatography, Liquid , Embryo, Nonmammalian , Tandem Mass Spectrometry , Zebrafish/embryology , Zebrafish/metabolism
20.
J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry ; 45(10): 1206-1214, 2006 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17003666

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To investigate children selected from a community sample for showing extreme autistic-like traits and to assess the degree to which these individual traits--social impairments (SIs), communication impairments (CIs), and restricted repetitive behaviors and interests (RRBIs)--are caused by genes and environments, whether all of them are caused by the same genes and environments, and how often they occur together (as required by an autism diagnosis). METHOD: The most extreme-scoring 5% were selected from 3,419 8-year-old pairs in the Twins Early Development Study assessed on the Childhood Asperger Syndrome Test. Phenotypic associations between extreme traits were compared with associations among the full-scale scores. Genetic associations between extreme traits were quantified using bivariate DeFries-Fulker extremes analysis. RESULTS: Phenotypic relationships between extreme SIs, CIs, and RRBIs were modest. There was a degree of genetic overlap between them, but also substantial genetic specificity. CONCLUSIONS: This first twin study assessing the links between extreme individual autistic-like traits (SIs, CIs, and RRBIs) found that all are highly heritable but show modest phenotypic and genetic overlap. This finding concurs with that of an earlier study from the same cohort that showed that a total autistic symptoms score at the extreme showed high heritability and that SIs, CIs, and RRBIs show weak links in the general population. This new finding has relevance for both clinical models and future molecular genetic studies.


Subject(s)
Autistic Disorder/epidemiology , Autistic Disorder/genetics , Genotype , Phenotype , Population Surveillance/methods , Stereotypic Movement Disorder/epidemiology , Stereotypic Movement Disorder/genetics , Twins/genetics , Child , Environment , Female , Humans , Male , Surveys and Questionnaires
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