9 results on '"O'Donovan, Michael"'
Search Results
2. Predictors of developmental dyslexia in European orthographies with varying complexity.
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Landerl, Karin, Ramus, Franck, Moll, Kristina, Lyytinen, Heikki, Leppänen, Paavo H. T., Lohvansuu, Kaisa, O’Donovan, Michael, Williams, Julie, Bartling, Jürgen, Bruder, Jennifer, Kunze, Sarah, Neuhoff, Nina, Tóth, Dénes, Honbolygó, Ferenc, Csépe, Valéria, Bogliotti, Caroline, Iannuzzi, Stéphanie, Chaix, Yves, Démonet, Jean‐François, and Longeras, Emilie
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DYSLEXIA -- Risk factors ,CHI-squared test ,CHILD Behavior Checklist ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,DYSLEXIA ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,PROBABILITY theory ,RESEARCH funding ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,DATA analysis ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Background: The relationship between phoneme awareness, rapid automatized naming (RAN), verbal short-term/working memory (ST/WM) and diagnostic category is investigated in control and dyslexic children, and the extent to which this depends on orthographic complexity. Methods: General cognitive, phonological and literacy skills were tested in 1,138 control and 1,114 dyslexic children speaking six different languages spanning a large range of orthographic complexity (Finnish, Hungarian, German, Dutch, French, English). Results: Phoneme deletion and RAN were strong concurrent predictors of developmental dyslexia, while verbal ST/WM and general verbal abilities played a comparatively minor role. In logistic regression models, more participants were classified correctly when orthography was more complex. The impact of phoneme deletion and RAN-digits was stronger in complex than in less complex orthographies. Conclusions: Findings are largely consistent with the literature on predictors of dyslexia and literacy skills, while uniquely demonstrating how orthographic complexity exacerbates some symptoms of dyslexia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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3. Variation of subclinical psychosis across 16 sites in Europe and Brazil: findings from the multi-national EU-GEI study.
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D'Andrea G, Quattrone D, Malone K, Tripoli G, Trotta G, Spinazzola E, Gayer-Anderson C, Jongsma HE, Sideli L, Stilo SA, La Cascia C, Ferraro L, Lasalvia A, Tosato S, Tortelli A, Velthorst E, de Haan L, Llorca PM, Rossi Menezes P, Santos JL, Arrojo M, Bobes J, Sanjuán J, Bernardo M, Arango C, Kirkbride JB, Jones PB, Rutten BP, Van Os J, Selten JP, Vassos E, Schürhoff F, Szöke A, Pignon B, O'Donovan M, Richards A, Morgan C, Di Forti M, Tarricone I, and Murray RM
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- Humans, Male, Female, Europe epidemiology, Adult, Brazil epidemiology, Young Adult, Adolescent, Incidence, Middle Aged, Phenotype, Psychotic Disorders epidemiology, Schizotypal Personality Disorder epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Incidence of first-episode psychosis (FEP) varies substantially across geographic regions. Phenotypes of subclinical psychosis (SP), such as psychotic-like experiences (PLEs) and schizotypy, present several similarities with psychosis. We aimed to examine whether SP measures varied across different sites and whether this variation was comparable with FEP incidence within the same areas. We further examined contribution of environmental and genetic factors to SP., Methods: We used data from 1497 controls recruited in 16 different sites across 6 countries. Factor scores for several psychopathological dimensions of schizotypy and PLEs were obtained using multidimensional item response theory models. Variation of these scores was assessed using multi-level regression analysis to estimate individual and between-sites variance adjusting for age, sex, education, migrant, employment and relational status, childhood adversity, and cannabis use. In the final model we added local FEP incidence as a second-level variable. Association with genetic liability was examined separately., Results: Schizotypy showed a large between-sites variation with up to 15% of variance attributable to site-level characteristics. Adding local FEP incidence to the model considerably reduced the between-sites unexplained schizotypy variance. PLEs did not show as much variation. Overall, SP was associated with younger age, migrant, unmarried, unemployed and less educated individuals, cannabis use, and childhood adversity. Both phenotypes were associated with genetic liability to schizophrenia., Conclusions: Schizotypy showed substantial between-sites variation, being more represented in areas where FEP incidence is higher. This supports the hypothesis that shared contextual factors shape the between-sites variation of psychosis across the spectrum.
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- 2024
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4. Replicated evidence that endophenotypic expression of schizophrenia polygenic risk is greater in healthy siblings of patients compared to controls, suggesting gene-environment interaction. The EUGEI study.
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van Os J, Pries LK, Delespaul P, Kenis G, Luykx JJ, Lin BD, Richards AL, Akdede B, Binbay T, Altınyazar V, Yalınçetin B, Gümüş-Akay G, Cihan B, Soygür H, Ulaş H, Cankurtaran EŞ, Kaymak SU, Mihaljevic MM, Petrovic SA, Mirjanic T, Bernardo M, Cabrera B, Bobes J, Saiz PA, García-Portilla MP, Sanjuan J, Aguilar EJ, Santos JL, Jiménez-López E, Arrojo M, Carracedo A, López G, González-Peñas J, Parellada M, Maric NP, Atbaşoğlu C, Ucok A, Alptekin K, Saka MC, Arango C, O'Donovan M, Rutten BPF, and Guloksuz S
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- Adult, Case-Control Studies, Endophenotypes, Europe, Female, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Psychotic Disorders psychology, Risk Factors, Schizophrenic Psychology, Young Adult, Gene-Environment Interaction, Multifactorial Inheritance, Psychotic Disorders genetics, Schizophrenia genetics, Siblings
- Abstract
Background: First-degree relatives of patients with psychotic disorder have higher levels of polygenic risk (PRS) for schizophrenia and higher levels of intermediate phenotypes., Methods: We conducted, using two different samples for discovery (n = 336 controls and 649 siblings of patients with psychotic disorder) and replication (n = 1208 controls and 1106 siblings), an analysis of association between PRS on the one hand and psychopathological and cognitive intermediate phenotypes of schizophrenia on the other in a sample at average genetic risk (healthy controls) and a sample at higher than average risk (healthy siblings of patients). Two subthreshold psychosis phenotypes, as well as a standardised measure of cognitive ability, based on a short version of the WAIS-III short form, were used. In addition, a measure of jumping to conclusion bias (replication sample only) was tested for association with PRS., Results: In both discovery and replication sample, evidence for an association between PRS and subthreshold psychosis phenotypes was observed in the relatives of patients, whereas in the controls no association was observed. Jumping to conclusion bias was similarly only associated with PRS in the sibling group. Cognitive ability was weakly negatively and non-significantly associated with PRS in both the sibling and the control group., Conclusions: The degree of endophenotypic expression of schizophrenia polygenic risk depends on having a sibling with psychotic disorder, suggestive of underlying gene-environment interaction. Cognitive biases may better index genetic risk of disorder than traditional measures of neurocognition, which instead may reflect the population distribution of cognitive ability impacting the prognosis of psychotic disorder.
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- 2020
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5. Transdiagnostic dimensions of psychopathology at first episode psychosis: findings from the multinational EU-GEI study.
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Quattrone D, Di Forti M, Gayer-Anderson C, Ferraro L, Jongsma HE, Tripoli G, La Cascia C, La Barbera D, Tarricone I, Berardi D, Szöke A, Arango C, Lasalvia A, Tortelli A, Llorca PM, de Haan L, Velthorst E, Bobes J, Bernardo M, Sanjuán J, Santos JL, Arrojo M, Del-Ben CM, Menezes PR, Selten JP, Jones PB, Kirkbride JB, Richards AL, O'Donovan MC, Sham PC, Vassos E, Rutten BP, van Os J, Morgan C, Lewis CM, Murray RM, and Reininghaus U
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- Adult, Affective Disorders, Psychotic, Bipolar Disorder psychology, Depression psychology, Europe, Female, Humans, Male, Models, Psychological, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, ROC Curve, Young Adult, Psychopathology, Psychotic Disorders classification, Psychotic Disorders psychology, Schizophrenia classification, Schizophrenic Psychology
- Abstract
Background: The value of the nosological distinction between non-affective and affective psychosis has frequently been challenged. We aimed to investigate the transdiagnostic dimensional structure and associated characteristics of psychopathology at First Episode Psychosis (FEP). Regardless of diagnostic categories, we expected that positive symptoms occurred more frequently in ethnic minority groups and in more densely populated environments, and that negative symptoms were associated with indices of neurodevelopmental impairment., Method: This study included 2182 FEP individuals recruited across six countries, as part of the EUropean network of national schizophrenia networks studying Gene-Environment Interactions (EU-GEI) study. Symptom ratings were analysed using multidimensional item response modelling in Mplus to estimate five theory-based models of psychosis. We used multiple regression models to examine demographic and context factors associated with symptom dimensions., Results: A bifactor model, composed of one general factor and five specific dimensions of positive, negative, disorganization, manic and depressive symptoms, best-represented associations among ratings of psychotic symptoms. Positive symptoms were more common in ethnic minority groups. Urbanicity was associated with a higher score on the general factor. Men presented with more negative and less depressive symptoms than women. Early age-at-first-contact with psychiatric services was associated with higher scores on negative, disorganized, and manic symptom dimensions., Conclusions: Our results suggest that the bifactor model of psychopathology holds across diagnostic categories of non-affective and affective psychosis at FEP, and demographic and context determinants map onto general and specific symptom dimensions. These findings have implications for tailoring symptom-specific treatments and inform research into the mood-psychosis spectrum.
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- 2019
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6. Analysis of genome-wide association studies of Alzheimer disease and of Parkinson disease to determine if these 2 diseases share a common genetic risk.
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Moskvina V, Harold D, Russo G, Vedernikov A, Sharma M, Saad M, Holmans P, Bras JM, Bettella F, Keller MF, Nicolaou N, Simón-Sánchez J, Gibbs JR, Schulte C, Durr A, Guerreiro R, Hernandez D, Brice A, Stefánsson H, Majamaa K, Gasser T, Heutink P, Wood N, Martinez M, Singleton AB, Nalls MA, Hardy J, Owen MJ, O'Donovan MC, Williams J, Morris HR, and Williams NM
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- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Databases, Factual statistics & numerical data, Europe, Female, Gene Frequency, Genotype, Humans, In Vitro Techniques, Male, Middle Aged, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide genetics, Risk Factors, United States, Alzheimer Disease genetics, Genetic Predisposition to Disease genetics, Genome-Wide Association Study, Parkinson Disease genetics
- Abstract
Importance: Despite Alzheimer disease (AD) and Parkinson disease (PD) being clinically distinct entities, there is a possibility of a pathological overlap, with some genome-wide association (GWA) studies suggesting that the 2 diseases represent a biological continuum. The application of GWA studies to idiopathic forms of AD and PD have identified a number of loci that contain genetic variants that increase the risk of these disorders., Objective: To assess the genetic overlap between PD and AD by testing for the presence of potentially pleiotropic loci in 2 recent GWA studies of PD and AD., Design: Combined GWA analysis., Setting: Data sets from the United Kingdom, Germany, France, and the United States., Participants: Thousands of patients with AD or PD and their controls., Main Outcomes and Measures: Meta-analysis of GWA studies of AD and PD., Methods: To identify evidence for potentially pleiotropic alleles that increased the risk for both PD and AD, we performed a combined PD-AD meta-analysis and compared the results with those obtained in the primary GWA studies.We also tested for a net effect of potentially polygenic alleles that were shared by both disorders by performing a polygenic score analysis. Finally, we also performed a gene-based association analysis that was aimed at detecting genes that harbor multiple disease-causing single-nucleotide polymorphisms, some of which confer a risk of PD and some a risk of AD., Results: Detailed interrogation of the single-nucleotide polymorphism, polygenic, and gene-based analyses resulted in no significant evidence that supported the presence of loci that increase the risk of both PD and AD., Conclusions and Relevance: Our findings therefore imply that loci that increase the risk of both PD and AD are not widespread and that the pathological overlap could instead be “downstream” of the primary susceptibility genes that increase the risk of each disease.
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- 2013
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7. Additive genetic variation in schizophrenia risk is shared by populations of African and European descent.
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de Candia TR, Lee SH, Yang J, Browning BL, Gejman PV, Levinson DF, Mowry BJ, Hewitt JK, Goddard ME, O'Donovan MC, Purcell SM, Posthuma D, Visscher PM, Wray NR, and Keller MC
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- Africa ethnology, Cohort Studies, Europe ethnology, Gene Frequency genetics, Humans, Inheritance Patterns genetics, Models, Genetic, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide genetics, Recombination, Genetic genetics, Risk Factors, Black People genetics, Genealogy and Heraldry, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Genetic Variation, Genetics, Population, Schizophrenia genetics, White People genetics
- Abstract
To investigate the extent to which the proportion of schizophrenia's additive genetic variation tagged by SNPs is shared by populations of European and African descent, we analyzed the largest combined African descent (AD [n = 2,142]) and European descent (ED [n = 4,990]) schizophrenia case-control genome-wide association study (GWAS) data set available, the Molecular Genetics of Schizophrenia (MGS) data set. We show how a method that uses genomic similarities at measured SNPs to estimate the additive genetic correlation (SNP correlation [SNP-rg]) between traits can be extended to estimate SNP-rg for the same trait between ethnicities. We estimated SNP-rg for schizophrenia between the MGS ED and MGS AD samples to be 0.66 (SE = 0.23), which is significantly different from 0 (p(SNP-rg = 0) = 0.0003), but not 1 (p(SNP-rg = 1) = 0.26). We re-estimated SNP-rg between an independent ED data set (n = 6,665) and the MGS AD sample to be 0.61 (SE = 0.21, p(SNP-rg = 0) = 0.0003, p(SNP-rg = 1) = 0.16). These results suggest that many schizophrenia risk alleles are shared across ethnic groups and predate African-European divergence., (Copyright © 2013 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2013
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8. Common polygenic variation contributes to risk of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder.
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Purcell SM, Wray NR, Stone JL, Visscher PM, O'Donovan MC, Sullivan PF, and Sklar P
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- Alleles, Case-Control Studies, Europe, Female, Gene Frequency genetics, Genome, Human genetics, Genome-Wide Association Study, Humans, Major Histocompatibility Complex genetics, Male, Models, Genetic, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide genetics, Bipolar Disorder genetics, Genetic Predisposition to Disease genetics, Genetic Variation genetics, Multifactorial Inheritance genetics, Schizophrenia genetics
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Schizophrenia is a severe mental disorder with a lifetime risk of about 1%, characterized by hallucinations, delusions and cognitive deficits, with heritability estimated at up to 80%. We performed a genome-wide association study of 3,322 European individuals with schizophrenia and 3,587 controls. Here we show, using two analytic approaches, the extent to which common genetic variation underlies the risk of schizophrenia. First, we implicate the major histocompatibility complex. Second, we provide molecular genetic evidence for a substantial polygenic component to the risk of schizophrenia involving thousands of common alleles of very small effect. We show that this component also contributes to the risk of bipolar disorder, but not to several non-psychiatric diseases.
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- 2009
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9. No major schizophrenia locus detected on chromosome 1q in a large multicenter sample.
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Levinson DF, Holmans PA, Laurent C, Riley B, Pulver AE, Gejman PV, Schwab SG, Williams NM, Owen MJ, Wildenauer DB, Sanders AR, Nestadt G, Mowry BJ, Wormley B, Bauché S, Soubigou S, Ribble R, Nertney DA, Liang KY, Martinolich L, Maier W, Norton N, Williams H, Albus M, Carpenter EB, DeMarchi N, Ewen-White KR, Walsh D, Jay M, Deleuze JF, O'Neill FA, Papadimitriou G, Weilbaecher A, Lerer B, O'Donovan MC, Dikeos D, Silverman JM, Kendler KS, Mallet J, Crowe RR, and Walters M
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- Africa, Alleles, Australia, Canada, Europe, Female, Genes, Recessive, Genotype, Humans, Lod Score, Male, Microsatellite Repeats, Pedigree, Schizophrenia ethnology, United States, Chromosomes, Human, Pair 1 genetics, Genetic Linkage, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Schizophrenia genetics
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Reports of substantial evidence for genetic linkage of schizophrenia to chromosome 1q were evaluated by genotyping 16 DNA markers across 107 centimorgans of this chromosome in a multicenter sample of 779 informative schizophrenia pedigrees. No significant evidence was observed for such linkage, nor for heterogeneity in allele sharing among the eight individual samples. Separate analyses of European-origin families, recessive models of inheritance, and families with larger numbers of affected cases also failed to produce significant evidence for linkage. If schizophrenia susceptibility genes are present on chromosome 1q, their population-wide genetic effects are likely to be small.
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- 2002
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