Intermediate phenotypes and genetic mechanisms of psychiatric disorders

A Meyer-Lindenberg, DR Weinberger - Nature reviews neuroscience, 2006 - nature.com
Nature reviews neuroscience, 2006nature.com
Genes are major contributors to many psychiatric diseases, but their mechanisms of action
have long seemed elusive. The intermediate phenotype concept represents a strategy for
characterizing the neural systems affected by risk gene variants to elucidate quantitative,
mechanistic aspects of brain function implicated in psychiatric disease. Using imaging
genetics as an example, we illustrate recent advances, challenges and implications of
linking genes to structural and functional variation in brain systems related to cognition and …
Abstract
Genes are major contributors to many psychiatric diseases, but their mechanisms of action have long seemed elusive. The intermediate phenotype concept represents a strategy for characterizing the neural systems affected by risk gene variants to elucidate quantitative, mechanistic aspects of brain function implicated in psychiatric disease. Using imaging genetics as an example, we illustrate recent advances, challenges and implications of linking genes to structural and functional variation in brain systems related to cognition and emotion.
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