Queensland Brain Institute, University of Queensland, St Lucia, QLD, Australia.
Transl Psychiatry. 2011 Jun 28;1(6):e14. doi: 10.1038/tp.2011.16.
Waddington's original description of canalization refers to the ability of an organism to maintain phenotypic fidelity in the face of environmental and/or genetic perturbation. Development of the human brain requires exposure to a 'wild-type' environment-one that supports the optimal set of instructions for development. Recently derived brain structures in our species, such as the expanded neocortex, may be more vulnerable to decanalization because there has been insufficient time to evolve buffering capacity. On the basis of modern notions of decanalization, we provide perspectives on selected environmental and genetic risk factors for schizophrenia, and we discuss strengths and weaknesses of this conceptual framework. We argue that if we are to build a solid foundation for translational psychiatry, we must explore models that attempt to capture the complexity of the interaction between genetic and non-genetic risk factors in mediating and modulating brain development.
Waddington 最初对 canalization 的描述是指生物体在面对环境和/或遗传干扰时保持表型稳定性的能力。人类大脑的发育需要暴露在“野生型”环境中,这种环境支持发育的最佳指令集。我们物种中最近衍生的大脑结构,如扩大的新皮层,可能更容易去 canalization,因为还没有足够的时间来进化出缓冲能力。基于现代的去 canalization 概念,我们提供了一些关于精神分裂症的环境和遗传风险因素的观点,并讨论了这个概念框架的优缺点。我们认为,如果我们要为转化精神病学奠定坚实的基础,就必须探索能够捕捉遗传和非遗传风险因素在调节大脑发育方面相互作用的复杂性的模型。