Dissecting the genetic complexity of schizophrenia

Twin, adoption and family studies have provided overwhelming but indirect evidence for a significant genetic contribution to the etiology of schizophrenia. More recent studies exploiting a plethora of highly polymorphic genetic markers provide a more direct approach to the identification and localiz...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular psychiatry 1997-05, Vol.2 (3), p.211-223
Hauptverfasser: Karayiorgou, M, Gogos, J A
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container_title Molecular psychiatry
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creator Karayiorgou, M
Gogos, J A
description Twin, adoption and family studies have provided overwhelming but indirect evidence for a significant genetic contribution to the etiology of schizophrenia. More recent studies exploiting a plethora of highly polymorphic genetic markers provide a more direct approach to the identification and localization of genes. Current investigative efforts to identify schizophrenia susceptibility genes include diverse approaches such as linkage analysis, association studies, search for chromosomal abnormalities, analysis of disorders or syndromes with simple inheritance that overlap phenotypically with schizophrenia, studies of genetic anticipation and efforts to facilitate genetic analysis by reducing the phenotypic complexity of the disease. For the first time, after many years, there are now several promising findings, as well as replication efforts that inspire a certain degree of confidence in them.
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subjects Chromosome aberrations
Etiology
Family studies
Genetic analysis
Genetic Linkage - genetics
Genetic markers
Heredity
Humans
Linkage analysis
Localization
Mental disorders
Schizophrenia
Schizophrenia - genetics
title Dissecting the genetic complexity of schizophrenia
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