Binder Elisabeth B
Department of Translational Research in PsychiatryMax-Planck Institute of Psychiatry, Munich, Germany.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral SciencesEmory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Eur J Psychotraumatol. 2018 Jan 17;8(sup5):1412745. doi: 10.1080/20008198.2017.1412745. eCollection 2017.
Epidemiological studies indicate a combined contribution of genetic and environmental factors, mainly exposure to adverse life events, in the risk for psychiatric disease. Understanding how adverse life events interact with genetic predisposition on the molecular level to shape risk and resilience to psychiatric disorders may yield important insight into disease mechanism. Using the example of the molecular mechanisms of interaction of functional genetic variants within the stress-regulating gene and early adversity, it is delineated how this interaction could contribute to transdiagnostic disease risk via a combined genetic and epigenetic disinhibition of transcription. This knowledge may now allow to develop biomarkers for a transdiagnostic subset of psychiatric patients and to personalize treatment.
流行病学研究表明,遗传因素和环境因素(主要是暴露于不良生活事件)共同作用于精神疾病的风险。了解不良生活事件如何在分子水平上与遗传易感性相互作用,从而塑造对精神障碍的易感性和恢复力,可能会为疾病机制提供重要的见解。以应激调节基因内功能性遗传变异与早期逆境的相互作用分子机制为例,阐述了这种相互作用如何通过对转录的遗传和表观遗传联合去抑制作用导致跨诊断疾病风险。这些知识现在可能有助于为一部分跨诊断的精神疾病患者开发生物标志物并实现个性化治疗。