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		<title>Copy that! DNA underwrites the diametric model of mental illness</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 03 Dec 2009 01:12:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>DNAWellness</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[DNA Medicine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[DNA Science]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Genomic Variation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mental Illness]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The Imprinted Brain How genes set the balance between autism and psychosis. by Christopher Badcock Ph.D. The imprinted brain theory had two distinct origins, both in the late 1990s. First, I developed the idea that Freud&#8217;s id and ego might be the psychological agents of paternally- and maternally-active imprinted genes respectively, plus X chromosome genes [...]<p><a href="http://dnawellnessinfo.com/dna-medicine/copy-dna-underwrites-diametric-model-mental-illness/">Copy that! DNA underwrites the diametric model of mental illness</a> is a post from: <a href="http://dnawellnessinfo.com">dnawellnessinfo.com</a></p>
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<p>The Imprinted Brain<br />
How genes set the  balance between autism and psychosis.</p>
<div style="font-size: 13px; padding-top: 5px;">by <a href="/blog/bloggers/christopher-badcock-phd">Christopher Badcock Ph.D.</a></div>
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<p>The imprinted <a title="Psychology Today looks at Neuroscience" href="/basics/neuroscience">brain</a> theory had two distinct origins, both in the  late 1990s. First, I developed the idea that Freud&#8217;s <em>id</em> and  <em>ego</em> might be the psychological agents of paternally- and  maternally-active imprinted <a title="Psychology Today looks at Genetics" href="/basics/genetics">genes</a> respectively, plus X chromosome genes on the  mother&#8217;s side. Imprinted genes are those which are expressed from one <a title="Psychology Today looks at Parenting" href="/basics/parenting">parent</a> only. The classic  example is <em>IGF2</em>: a growth-factor gene expressed from the father&#8217;s copy,  but silent when inherited from the mother. X chromosome genes resemble  maternally-active ones to the extent that all mothers are female, and because  female mammals have two Xs to the male&#8217;s one, such genes are subject to  female-benefiting natural selection twice as often as they are to  male-benefiting evolution.</p>
<p>The second origin was in my observation that the symptoms of <a title="Psychology Today looks at Autism" href="/conditions/autism">autism</a> could be seen as  diametrically opposite to those of paranoid <a title="Psychology Today looks at Schizophrenia" href="/conditions/schizophrenia">schizophrenia</a>. For a while, both these ideas  floated around in my mind independently, but before long I became disillusioned  with <a title="Psychology Today looks at Psychoanalysis" href="/basics/psychoanalysis">Freudian</a> psychology  (which resembled <a title="Psychology Today looks at Fear" href="/basics/fear">paranoia</a> too closely for  comfort). Then the two ideas coalesced. It occurred to me that autism might be  related to enhanced paternal gene expression and/or reduced maternal and X  chromosome gene expression, and that paranoia might be the contrary: caused by  enhanced maternal and X chromosome gene and/or reduced paternal gene activity.  The imprinted brain theory was born with the new century and was soon taken up  by Bernard Crespi, Killam Research Fellow in the Department of Biosciences at  Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, with whom I published a number of  scientific papers outlining the new theory, notably in <em>Behavioral and Brain  Sciences</em> in 2008.</p>
<p>Now Crespi, writing with Philip Stead and Michael Elliot in <em>Proceedings  of the National Academy of Sciences</em>, has opened up a novel line of enquiry  that gives our distinctive, diametric model of mental illness a remarkable and  unexpected confirmation. The subject of his study is copy number variation  (CNV): the recently-discovered and very surprising finding that individuals vary  in the number of copies of particular genes they carry by up to 12% of the  total. CNV can result from duplication or deletion of genes, and to this extent  resembles imprinted-gene expression, which can produce double expression of  normally singly-expressed genes (for example in Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome,  where both parents&#8217; copies of <em>IGF2</em> are expressed) or no expression at  all (as in Silver-Russell syndrome, where neither copy of <em>IGF2</em> is  active). The result is diametrically different outcomes: overgrowth in the  former syndrome and growth-retardation in the latter.</p>
<p>Crespi, Stead, and Elliot used CNV, single-gene associations, growth-signalling  pathways, and brain-growth outcomes to evaluate 4 models of mental illness (see  diagram): (a) Subsumed; (b) Separate; (c) Diametric, and (d) Overlapping. They  found that CNV findings support the diametric model, which holds that autism and  schizophrenia stand in opposition to one another: at 4 places in the genome  deletions pre-dispose to one, while duplications pre-dispose to the other. They  also found that single-gene associations are inconsistent with (b), the separate  model, because schizophrenia and autism frequently share associated genes. Where  brain-growth was concerned, they found that autism goes with enhanced brain  growth, whereas schizophrenia is characterized by reduced brain size-just as the  diametric model predicts. Indeed, Shinawi et al. report independently in the  <em>Journal of Medical Genetics</em> that autism and macrocephaly observed with  deletion and microcephaly seen in duplication of a site on chromosome 16 support  the diametric model.</p>
<p>What is truly remarkable about these studies is that CNV was unknown to me  when I first conceived the diametric model, and did not figure in my original  formulation of the theory, which was confined to imprinted and X chromosome  genes. The fact that such bottom-up, genome-based analyses of a previously  unknown and very surprising genetic mechanism can be shown to endorse my  original top-down, symptom-based approach suggests that the new diametric model  of mental illness stands on foundations which reach right down to the roots of  the genome. I realized a long time ago that the only real proof of the Freudian  model of the mind would lie in DNA, but I never expected that such remarkable  confirmation of my alternative, diametric model would emerge so soon and in  relation to such an unforeseen finding as this!</p>
<p>DNAWellnessinfo.com Resource:  <a title="psychologytoday.com" href="http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/the-imprinted-brain/200912/copy-dna-underwrites-the-diametric-model-mental-illness" target="_blank">http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/the-imprinted-brain/200912/copy-dna-underwrites-the-diametric-model-mental-illness</a></div>
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