Tsuang M T, Stone W S, Faraone S V
Harvard Medical School, Department of Psychiatry at the Massachusetts Mental Health Center, 74 Fenwood Road, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
Curr Psychiatry Rep. 1999 Oct;1(1):20-4. doi: 10.1007/s11920-999-0006-0.
Behavioral genetic studies provide overwhelming evidence that genes contribute to schizophrenia. Recently, genetic studies have provided promising evidence that schizophrenia genes are linked to several chromosomal locations in affected family members. Despite this progress, individual genes for schizophrenia have yet to be identified. Future progress will depend, in part, on the selection of phenotypes that best reflect effects of etiologic genes. One such phenotype is schizotaxia, a clinically meaningful syndrome that reflects the genetic liability to schizophrenia in nonpsychotic individuals. The potential importance of schizotaxia, or similar concepts, for use in genetic studies, is discussed.
行为遗传学研究提供了压倒性的证据,表明基因与精神分裂症有关。最近,基因研究提供了有希望的证据,表明精神分裂症基因与受影响家庭成员的几个染色体位置有关。尽管取得了这一进展,但精神分裂症的个别基因尚未被确定。未来的进展部分将取决于选择最能反映病因基因作用的表型。一种这样的表型是分裂性障碍,这是一种具有临床意义的综合征,反映了非精神病个体患精神分裂症的遗传易感性。本文讨论了分裂性障碍或类似概念在基因研究中的潜在重要性。