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Fear‐potentiated startle response as an endophenotype: Evaluating metrics and methods for genetic applications

Authors :
Ellen Leibenluft
Brad Verhulst
Ashlee A. Moore
Jeanne E. Savage
Jessica L. Bourdon
Christian Grillon
Laura Machlin
Oumaima Kaabi
Roxann Roberson-Nay
Melissa A. Brotman
Elizabeth Moroney
Daniel S. Pine
Dever M. Carney
Chelsea Sawyers
Scott R. Vrana
John M. Hettema
Source :
Psychophysiology
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Wiley, 2019.

Abstract

The modulation of the startle response (SR) by threatening stimuli (fear-potentiated startle; FPS), is a proposed endophenotype for disorders of the fearful-fearlessness spectrum. FPS has failed to show evidence of heritability, raising concerns. However, the metrics used to index FPS – and, importantly, other conditional phenotypes that are dependent on a baseline – may not be suitable for the approaches used in genetic epidemiology studies. Here we evaluated multiple metrics of FPS in a population-based sample of pre-adolescent twins (N = 569 from 320 twin pairs, M(age) = 11.4) who completed a fear-conditioning paradigm with airpuff-elicited SR on two occasions (~1 month apart). We applied univariate and multivariate biometric modeling to estimate the heritability of FPS using several proposed standardization procedures. This was extended with data simulations to evaluate biases in heritability estimates of FPS (and similar metrics) under various scenarios. Consistent with previous studies, results indicated moderate test-retest reliability (r = .59) and heritability of the overall SR (h(2) = 34%) but poor reliability and virtually no unique genetic influences on FPS when considering a raw or standardized differential score that removes baseline SR. Simulations demonstrated that the use of differential scores introduces bias in heritability estimates relative to jointly analyzing baseline SR and FPS in a multivariate model. However, strong dependency of FPS on baseline levels make unique genetic influences virtually impossible to detect regardless of methodology. These findings indicate that FPS and other conditional phenotypes may not be well-suited to serve as endophenotypes unless such co-dependency can be disentangled.

Details

ISSN :
14698986 and 00485772
Volume :
56
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Psychophysiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b8e0a3a0afb8f4bae5d03ef2a255d4e9