Butcher Lee M, Kennedy Joanna Kj, Plomin Robert
Social, Genetic and Developmental Psychiatry Centre, Number P080, Institute of Psychiatry, DeCrespigny Park, London, SE5 8AF, United Kingdom.
Curr Opin Neurobiol. 2006 Apr;16(2):145-51. doi: 10.1016/j.conb.2006.03.004. Epub 2006 Mar 24.
Multivariate genetic research suggests that a single set of genes affects most cognitive abilities and disabilities. This finding already has far-reaching implications for cognitive neuroscience, and will become even more revealing when this - presumably large - set of generalist genes is identified. Similar to other complex disorders and dimensions, molecular genetic research on cognitive abilities and disabilities is adopting genome-wide association strategies. These strategies involve very large samples to detect DNA associations of small effect size using microarrays that simultaneously assess hundreds of thousands of DNA markers. When this set of generalist genes is identified, it can be used to provide solid footholds in the climb towards a systems-level understanding of how genetically driven brain processes work together to affect diverse cognitive abilities and disabilities.
多变量基因研究表明,一组单一的基因会影响大多数认知能力和认知障碍。这一发现已经对认知神经科学产生了深远影响,并且当这一可能数量众多的通用基因集被识别出来时,将会更具启发性。与其他复杂疾病和维度类似,对认知能力和认知障碍的分子遗传学研究正在采用全基因组关联策略。这些策略涉及非常大的样本,使用能够同时评估数十万DNA标记的微阵列来检测效应大小较小的DNA关联。当这组通用基因被识别出来后,它可用于在朝着系统层面理解基因驱动的大脑过程如何共同作用以影响各种认知能力和认知障碍的攀登过程中提供坚实的立足点。