Toward Constructing an Endophenotype Strategy for Bipolar Disorders

Gregor Hasler, Wayne C. Drevets, Todd D. Gould, Irving I. Gottesman, Husseini K. Manji

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

354 Scopus citations

Abstract

Research aimed at elucidating the underlying neurobiology and genetics of bipolar disorder, and factors associated with treatment response, have been limited by a heterogeneous clinical phenotype and lack of knowledge about its underlying diathesis. We used a survey of clinical, epidemiological, neurobiological, and genetic studies to select and evaluate candidate endophenotypes for bipolar disorder. Numerous findings regarding brain function, brain structure, and response to pharmacological challenge in bipolar patients and their relatives deserve further investigation. Candidate brain function endophenotypes include attention deficits, deficits in verbal learning and memory, cognitive deficits after tryptophan depletion, circadian rhythm instability, and dysmodulation of motivation and reward. We selected reduced anterior cingulate volume and early-onset white matter abnormalities as candidate brain structure endophenotypes. Symptom provocation endophenotypes might be based on bipolar patients' sensitivity to sleep deprivation, psychostimulants, and cholinergic drugs. Phenotypic heterogeneity is a major impediment to the elucidation of the neurobiology and genetics of bipolar disorder. We present a strategy constructed to improve the phenotypic definition of bipolar disorder by elucidating candidate endophenotypes. Studies to evaluate candidate endophenotypes with respect to specificity, heritability, temporal stability, and prevalence in unaffected relatives are encouraged.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)93-105
Number of pages13
JournalBiological psychiatry
Volume60
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 15 2006
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Intermediate phenotype
  • biological marker
  • bipolar disorder
  • endophenotypic
  • families
  • genetics
  • twins

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