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. 2017 Sep;11(9):769-780.
doi: 10.2217/bmm-2017-0002. Epub 2017 Sep 11.

Redefining the endophenotype concept to accommodate transdiagnostic vulnerabilities and etiological complexity

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Redefining the endophenotype concept to accommodate transdiagnostic vulnerabilities and etiological complexity

Theodore P Beauchaine et al. Biomark Med. 2017 Sep.

Abstract

In psychopathology research, endophenotypes are a subset of biomarkers that indicate genetic vulnerability independent of clinical state. To date, an explicit expectation is that endophenotypes be specific to single disorders. We evaluate this expectation considering recent advances in psychiatric genetics, recognition that transdiagnostic vulnerability traits are often more useful than clinical diagnoses in psychiatric genetics, and appreciation for etiological complexity across genetic, neural, hormonal and environmental levels of analysis. We suggest that the disorder-specificity requirement of endophenotypes be relaxed, that neural functions are preferable to behaviors as starting points in searches for endophenotypes, and that future research should focus on interactive effects of multiple endophenotypes on complex psychiatric disorders, some of which are 'phenocopies' with distinct etiologies.

Keywords: ADHD; autism; complex; depression; endophenotype; etiology; genetic; neural.

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Conflict of interest statement

Financial & competing interests disclosure

Preparation of this article was supported by grants UH2DE025980 (National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research, TP Beauchaine, PI) and U54 HD087011 (National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities Research Center at Washington University, JN Constantino, PI). TP Beauchaine receives speaking honoraria and book royalties for related work, and JN Constantino receives royalties for commercial distribution of the Social Responsiveness Scale, a quantitative measure of autistic traits, use of which contributed to scientific advances described in this article. The authors have no other relevant affiliations or financial involvement with any organization or entity with a financial interest in or financial conflict with the subject matter or materials discussed in the manuscript apart from those disclosed.

No writing assistance was used in production of this manuscript.

Figures

<b>Figure 1.</b>
Figure 1.. Levels of analysis and measurement precision of genotypes, endophenotypes, and phenotypes.
Relations among genotypes, endophenotypes and phenotypes (A) and putative differences in measurement precision (B). Endophenotypes, which can be specified at many levels of analysis including neurobiological and behavioral, fall along pathways between (i.e., ‘bridge’) genotypes and phenotypes. A traditional assumption is that measurement precision of endophenotypes exceeds that of phenotypes (see text). The leftmost graph of (B) depicts perfect measurement precision of a dichotomous genetic vulnerability, distributed in equal proportions (50:50) in a sample of n = 1000. This level of precision is associated with genotyping a monogenic trait. The middle graph depicts measurement of an endophenotype of large effect size. The right graph depicts a phenotype measured with 50% error – a situation common to ratings of observed behavior [16]. As envisioned by Gottesman and Gould [3], better measurement precision of endophenotypes facilitates identification of genotypes.
<b>Figure 2.</b>
Figure 2.. Etiological complexity of ADHD and unipolar depression.
Blunted striatal responding to incentives (left panel, top) arises from aggregation of and complex interactions among normal allelic variation, heritable CNVs, de novo mutations, epigenetic factors, environmental risk exposures and neurohormonal influences. Very few of these are necessary or sufficient to produce the resulting subcortical endophenotype. Low striatal responding predisposes to trait anhedonia/irritability (a psychological state), producing a behavioral bias to reward seeking, which can temporarily upregulate aversive mood. Importantly, this behavioral bias can be moderated by other subcortical systems, including the amygdala and its interconnections (left panel, bottom). Strong amygdalar response to threat (a moderating subcortical endophenotype) predisposes to trait anxiety (a largely independent psychological state), which moderates trait anhedonia to produce a behavioral bias to immobilization. In most cases, these behavioral biases are insufficient to eventuate in psychopathology in the absence of prefrontal cortex dysfunction (a potentiating cortical endophenotype). Poor prefrontal regulation of subcortically generated emotions is observed in almost all forms of psychopathology (see text). For the sake of clarity, specific frontal structures that regulate subcortical systems (dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, ventromedial prefrontal cortex, orbitofrontal cortex, anterior cingulate cortex), and interconnections among subcortical systems (extended amygdala, bed nucleus of the stria terminalis) are omitted.

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