Refine
Has Fulltext
- yes (27)
Is part of the Bibliography
- yes (27)
Year of publication
Document Type
- Journal article (26)
- Doctoral Thesis (1)
Keywords
- ADHD (6)
- depression (4)
- bipolar disorder (3)
- pregnancy (3)
- BDNF (2)
- Bipolar disorder (2)
- antidepressant (2)
- anxiety (2)
- attention (2)
- hyperactivity (2)
- impulsivity (2)
- lactation (2)
- mental disorders (2)
- mental health (2)
- peripartum (2)
- polygenic risk score (2)
- systematic review (2)
- ADHD patients (1)
- Abelson helper integration-1 (AHI1) (1)
- Adult (1)
- Aggression (1)
- Alzheimers disease (1)
- Antisocial behavior (1)
- Arbeitsg (1)
- Association (1)
- Aufmerksamkeits-Defizit-Syndrom (1)
- Biomarke (1)
- C-reactive protein (1)
- COGITAT-Box (1)
- COVID-19 (1)
- Conduct disorder (1)
- Covid-19 (1)
- Cytokines (1)
- Deficit/hyperactivity disorder (1)
- Depression (1)
- Diagnostic approach (1)
- Dopamine Transporter (1)
- Dopaminstoffwechsel (1)
- Dopamintransporter (1)
- EBM (1)
- Elevated Plus Maze (1)
- Fibromyalgia syndrome (1)
- GHQ-28 (1)
- GRN (1)
- GWAS (1)
- Gene (1)
- Genotype (1)
- Inflammatio (1)
- Large multicenter ADHD (1)
- Maintenance treatment (1)
- Mania (1)
- Monopolar depression (1)
- Nesplora Aquarium (1)
- Nitric oxide (1)
- Nitric oxide synthase (1)
- Opioid receptor (1)
- PARK2 (1)
- Polarity index (1)
- Predominant polarity (1)
- Qb-Test (1)
- Rating scale (1)
- Schizophrenie (1)
- Serotonin (1)
- Serotonine transporter (1)
- Serotonintransporter (1)
- Skin biopsy (1)
- Stickstoffmonoxid (1)
- Stickstoffmonoxid-Synthase (1)
- Stickstoffoxidsynthase (1)
- Susceptibility loci (1)
- UPPS (1)
- accidents (1)
- adult attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (adult ADHD) (1)
- age (1)
- antidepressants (1)
- anxious depression (1)
- association (1)
- astrocytes (1)
- attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (1)
- breast cancer (1)
- ceramides (1)
- child development (1)
- clinical practice guideline (1)
- cognitive deficits (1)
- cohort studies (1)
- continuous performance test (1)
- cortical activation (1)
- cross-sectional studies (1)
- cross-sectional study (1)
- dementia (1)
- depressive disorder (1)
- disease modelling (1)
- early recognition (1)
- endocannabinoids (1)
- fNIRS (1)
- families (1)
- family caregivers (1)
- fibromyalgia syndrome (1)
- frontotemporal lobar degeneration (1)
- gene (1)
- gene ADGRL3 (1)
- geneexpression (1)
- genetic phenotypes (1)
- genome-wide association (1)
- glia (1)
- hiPSC (1)
- iPSCs (1)
- illness (1)
- incidence (1)
- induced pluripotent stem cells (1)
- informal caregiving (1)
- linkage (1)
- lithium (1)
- longitudinal studies (1)
- major depression (1)
- mapping susceptibility genes (1)
- maternal (1)
- mechanismofaction (1)
- mental illness (1)
- mitochondria (1)
- monoamine transporters (1)
- mood disorders (1)
- morality (1)
- mutation (1)
- near-infrared spectroscopy (1)
- neuropsychology (1)
- nitricoxidesynthase (1)
- observer agreement (1)
- onset (1)
- pain (1)
- paternal (1)
- people (1)
- pharmacotherapy (1)
- physical health (1)
- population-based studies (1)
- postnatal depression (1)
- prefrontal cortex (1)
- prevalence (1)
- prophylactic lithium (1)
- psychological distress (1)
- psychosocial stress (1)
- psychotropic medication (1)
- psychotropic medications (1)
- reliability (1)
- remitted/acute phase (1)
- risk SNP rs1397547 (1)
- risk genes (1)
- self-employed (1)
- small business (1)
- stress (1)
- substance abuse disorder (1)
- tandem mass spectrometry (1)
- therapy response (1)
- venturesomeness (1)
- verbal n-back (1)
Institute
- Klinik und Poliklinik für Psychiatrie, Psychosomatik und Psychotherapie (25)
- Frauenklinik und Poliklinik (2)
- Institut für Klinische Epidemiologie und Biometrie (2)
- Lehrstuhl für Molekulare Psychiatrie (2)
- Neurologische Klinik und Poliklinik (2)
- Deutsches Zentrum für Herzinsuffizienz (DZHI) (1)
- Klinik und Poliklinik für Kinder- und Jugendpsychiatrie, Psychosomatik und Psychotherapie (1)
Sonstige beteiligte Institutionen
Depression in the perinatal period is common in mothers worldwide. Emerging research indicates that fathers are also at risk of developing perinatal depression. However, knowledge regarding biological risk factors and pathophysiological mechanisms of perinatal depression is still scarce, particularly in fathers. It has been suggested that the neurotrophin BDNF may play a role in maternal perinatal depression; however, there is currently no data regarding paternal perinatal depression. For this pilot study, 81 expecting parents were recruited and assessed at several time points. We screened for depression using EPDS and MADRS, investigated several psychosocial variables, and took blood samples for BDNF val66met genotyping, epigenetic, and protein analysis. Between pregnancy and 12 months postpartum (pp), we found that 3.7 to 15.7% of fathers screened positive for depression, and 9.6 to 24% of mothers, with at least a twofold increased prevalence in both parents using MADRS compared with EPDS. We also identified several psychosocial factors associated with perinatal depression in both parents. The data revealed a trend that lower BDNF levels correlated with maternal depressive symptoms at 3 months pp. In the fathers, no significant correlations between BDNF and perinatal depression were found. Pregnant women demonstrated lower BDNF methylation and BDNF protein expression compared with men; however, these were found to increase postpartum. Lastly, we identified correlations between depressive symptoms and psychosocial/neurobiological factors. The data suggest that BDNF may play a role in maternal perinatal depression, but not paternal.
New innovative neuropsychological tests in attention deficit hyperactivity disorder ADHD have been proposed as objective measures for diagnosis and therapy. The current study aims to investigate two different commercial continuous performance tests (CPT) in a head-to-head comparison regarding their comparability and their link with clinical parameters. The CPTs were evaluated in a clinical sample of 29 adult patients presenting in an ADHD outpatient clinic. Correlational analyses were performed between neuropsychological data, clinical rating scales, and a personality-based measure. Though inattention was found to positively correlate between the two tests (r = 0.49, p = 0.01), no association with clinical measures and inattention was found for both tests. While hyperactivity did not correlate between both tests, current ADHD symptoms were positively associated with Nesplora Aquarium's motor activity (r = 0.52 to 0.61, p < 0.05) and the Qb-Test's hyperactivity (r = 0.52 to 0.71, p < 0.05). Conclusively, the overall comparability of the tests was limited and correlation with clinical parameters was low. While our study shows some interesting correlation between clinical symptoms and sub-scales of these tests, usage in clinical practice is not recommended.
Objective: The assessment of response to lithium maintenance treatment in bipolar disorder (BD) is complicated by variable length of treatment, unpredictable clinical course, and often inconsistent compliance. Prospective and retrospective methods of assessment of lithium response have been proposed in the literature. In this study we report the key phenotypic measures of the "Retrospective Criteria of Long-Term Treatment Response in Research Subjects with Bipolar Disorder" scale currently used in the Consortium on Lithium Genetics (ConLiGen) study.
Materials and Methods: Twenty-nine ConLiGen sites took part in a two-stage case-vignette rating procedure to examine inter-rater agreement [Kappa (\(\kappa\))] and reliability [intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC)] of lithium response. Annotated first-round vignettes and rating guidelines were circulated to expert research clinicians for training purposes between the two stages. Further, we analyzed the distributional properties of the treatment response scores available for 1,308 patients using mixture modeling.
Results: Substantial and moderate agreement was shown across sites in the first and second sets of vignettes (\(\kappa\) = 0.66 and \(\kappa\) = 0.54, respectively), without significant improvement from training. However, definition of response using the A score as a quantitative trait and selecting cases with B criteria of 4 or less showed an improvement between the two stages (\(ICC_1 = 0.71\) and \(ICC_2 = 0.75\), respectively). Mixture modeling of score distribution indicated three subpopulations (full responders, partial responders, non responders).
Conclusions: We identified two definitions of lithium response, one dichotomous and the other continuous, with moderate to substantial inter-rater agreement and reliability. Accurate phenotypic measurement of lithium response is crucial for the ongoing ConLiGen pharmacogenomic study.
Background
Several recent studies have investigated the role of C-reactive protein (CRP) in bipolar disorder (BD), but few studies have directly investigated the interaction between CRP genetic variants and peripheral CRP concentration across different phases of BD. In this study, we aimed to replicate previous findings that demonstrated altered CRP levels in BD, and to investigate whether there is an association of peripheral protein expression with genetic variants in the CRP gene.
Methods
221 patients were included in the study, of which 183 (all episodes, 46 not medicated, 174 medicated) were genotyped for CRP single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) shown to influence peripheral CRP protein expression (rs1800947, rs2808630, rs1417938, rs1205).
Results
There were no differences in CRP levels associated with the genotypes, only regarding the rs1205 SNP there were significantly different CRP protein expression between the genotypes when taking body mass index, age, BD polarity, subtype and leukocyte number into account. However, we could show significantly elevated CRP protein expression in manic patients compared to euthymic and depressed patients, independent from genotype. Medication was found to have no effect on CRP protein expression.
Conclusions
These results indicate that low grade inflammation might play a role in mania and might be rather a state than a trait marker of bipolar disorder.
Anxious depression represents a subtype of major depressive disorder and is associated with increased suicidality, severity, chronicity and lower treatment response. Only a few studies have investigated the differences between anxious depressed (aMDD) and non-anxious depressed (naMDD) patients regarding treatment dosage, serum-concentration and drug-specific treatment response. In our naturalistic and prospective study, we investigated whether the effectiveness of therapy including antidepressants (SSRI, SNRI, NaSSA, tricyclics and combinations) in aMDD patients differs significantly from that in naMDD patients. In a sample of 346 patients, we calculated the anxiety somatization factor (ASF) and defined treatment response as a reduction (≥50%) in the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS)-21 score after 7 weeks of pharmacological treatment. We did not observe an association between therapy response and the baseline ASF-scores, or differences in therapy outcomes between aMDD and naMDD patients. However, non-responders had higher ASF-scores, and at week 7 aMDD patients displayed a worse therapy outcome than naMDD patients. In subgroup analyses for different antidepressant drugs, venlafaxine-treated aMDD patients showed a significantly worse outcome at week 7. Future prospective, randomized-controlled studies should address the question of a worse therapy outcome in aMDD patients for different psychopharmaceuticals individually.
The main goal of the present study was the identification of cellular phenotypes in attention-deficit-/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) patient-derived cellular models from carriers of rare copy number variants (CNVs) in the PARK2 locus that have been previously associated with ADHD. Human-derived fibroblasts (HDF) were cultured and human-induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSC) were reprogrammed and differentiated into dopaminergic neuronal cells (mDANs). A series of assays in baseline condition and in different stress paradigms (nutrient deprivation, carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenyl hydrazine (CCCP)) focusing on mitochondrial function and energy metabolism (ATP production, basal oxygen consumption rates, reactive oxygen species (ROS) abundance) were performed and changes in mitochondrial network morphology evaluated. We found changes in PARK2 CNV deletion and duplication carriers with ADHD in PARK2 gene and protein expression, ATP production and basal oxygen consumption rates compared to healthy and ADHD wildtype control cell lines, partly differing between HDF and mDANs and to some extent enhanced in stress paradigms. The generation of ROS was not influenced by the genotype. Our preliminary work suggests an energy impairment in HDF and mDAN cells of PARK2 CNV deletion and duplication carriers with ADHD. The energy impairment could be associated with the role of PARK2 dysregulation in mitochondrial dynamics.
Background: There is increasing evidence that glial cells play a role in the pathomechanisms of mood disorders and the mode of action of antidepressant drugs.
Methods: To examine whether there is a direct effect on the expression of different genes encoding proteins that have been implicated in the pathophysiology of affective disorders, primary astrocyte cell cultures from rats were treated with two different antidepressant drugs, imipramine and escitalopram, and the RNA expression of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (Bdnf), serotonin transporter (5Htt), dopamine transporter (Dat), and endothelial nitric oxide synthase (Nos3) was examined.
Results: Stimulation of astroglial cell culture with imipramine, a tricyclic antidepressant, led to a significant increase of the Bdnf RNA level whereas treatment with escitalopram did not. In contrast, 5Htt was not differentially expressed after antidepressant treatment. Finally, neither Dat nor Nos3 RNA expression was detected in cultured astrocytes.
Conclusion: These data provide further evidence for a role of astroglial cells in the molecular mechanisms of action of antidepressants.
Der gasförmige Neurotransmitter Stickstoffmonoxid (NO) spielt eine Rolle bei verschiedenen physiologischen Vorgängen, aber auch psychiatrischen Erkrankungen wie Aggression, Ängstlichkeit, Depression und auch bei kognitiven Funktionen. Um mehr über die physiologische Rolle von NO herauszufinden untersuchten wir mittels Gen-Expressionsanalyse und Verhaltensversuchen Mäuse, bei denen die neuronale Isoform der Stickstoffmonoxidsynthase ausgeschaltet wurde. Die so genannte NOS-I ist die hauptsächliche Quelle von NO im zentralen Nervensystem. Knockout Tiere sind wertvolle Werkzeuge um sowohl den Einfluss eines Gens auf Verhalten als auch möglicherweise damit zusammenhängende Veränderungen des Transkriptoms zu identifizieren. Dies ist wichtig um herauszufinden, mit welchen molekularen Pfaden bestimmte Verhaltensweisen korreliert sind. In Bezug auf NOS-I gibt es zwei bisher beschriebene Knockout Mäuse Stämme. Es existieren KOex6 Knockout Mäuse, in welchen es überhaupt keine katalytisch aktive NOS-I gibt und es gibt einen Mausstamm, bei dem Exon 1 deletiert wurde, was aufgrund alternativer NOS-I Splicevarianten zu einer residualen Expression von bis zu 7% führt. Daher sind diese Mäsue besser zutreffend als Knockdown Mäuse zu bezeichnen. In der vorliegenden Arbeit untersuchten wir die Nos1 Knockdown Mäuse, da die hier vorliegende Situation wohl ähnlicher zu der bei menschlicher genetischer Varianten ist, da eine komplette Disruption bisher noch nicht beim Menschen beschrieben wurde. Es gibt diverse Studien, welche den behaviouralen Phänotyp der Nos1 Knockdown Mäuse untersuchen, aber diese widersprechen sich zum Teil. Bei unserer Untersuchung legten wir den Schwerpunkt auf Verhaltenstests, welche spezifische Symptome des Aufmerksamkeitsdefizit-/Hyperaktivitätssyndrom (ADHS) aufdecken sollten. Wir führten den Elevated Plus Maze Test (EPM) und ein modifiziertes Lochbrett-Paradigma, die COGITAT-Box, durch. Um die den gefundenen Verhaltensänderungen zugrunde liegenden molekularen Mechanismen herauszufinden, suchten wir nach Unterschieden der Expression des Serotonin- (5HTT) und des Dopamintransporters (DAT) zwischen den Knockdown und den Wildtyp Mäusen. Wir hatten spekuliert, dass die Disruption der NOS-I zu einer modifizierten Expression des DAT oder des 5HTT geführt habe könnte wegen den bekannten engen Interaktionen zwischen dem nitrinergen und den monoaminergen Systemen. Wir fanden einen diskret anxiolytischen Phänotyp, da die Knockdown Mäuse eine längere Zeit auf dem offenen Arm des EPM verbrachten bzw. häufiger den offenen Arm betraten im Vergleich zu dem Wildtypen. Dies war nicht durch eine höhere lokomotorische Aktivität zu erklären. Auch beobachteten wir ein geschlechterunabhängiges kognitives Defizit im Arbeits- und Referenzgedächtnis in der COGITAT-Box. Überraschenderweise fanden wir keine signifikante Dysregulation der Monoamin-Transporter in der Expressionsanalyse mittels der quantitativen Real Time PCR. Dies war eher unerwartet, da vorherige Studien verschiedene Veränderungen im serotonergen und dopaminergen System bei den Nos1 Knockdown Mäusen gefunden hatten, wie z.B. einen verminderten Serotonin-Umsatz in frontalen Cortex und hypofunktionale 5 HT1A and 5HT1B Rezeptoren. Auch ist bekannt, dass NO direkt Monoamin-Transporter nitrosyliert. Zusammenfassend zeigen die Nos1 Knockdown Mäuse ein charakteristisches behaviourales Profil mit reduzierter Ängstlichkeit und Defiziten im Gedächtnis. Weitere Studien sollten folgen um zu klären, ob diese Mäuse als Tiermodell für z.B. die Alzheimer-Erkrankung oder das Aufmerksamkeitsdefizit-/Hyperaktivitätssyndrom dienen könnten und die weitere pathophysiologische Rolle des NO bei neuropsychiatrischen Erkrankungen herauszufinden.
Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the ADGRL3 gene have been significantly associated with the development of ADHD, the aetiology of which remains poorly understood. The rs1397547 SNP has additionally been associated with significantly altered ADGRL3 transcription. We therefore generated iPSCs from two wild type ADHD patients, and two ADHD patients heterozygous for the risk SNP. With this resource we aim to facilitate further investigation into the complex and heterogenous pathology of ADHD. Furthermore, we demonstrate the feasibility of using magnetic activated cell sorting to allow the unbiased selection of fully reprogrammed iPSCs.
Aggressiveness is a behavioral trait that has the potential to be harmful to individuals and society. With an estimated heritability of about 40%, genetics is important in its development. We performed an exploratory genome-wide association (GWA) analysis of childhood aggressiveness in attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) to gain insight into the underlying biological processes associated with this trait. Our primary sample consisted of 1,060 adult ADHD patients (aADHD). To further explore the genetic architecture of childhood aggressiveness, we performed enrichment analyses of suggestive genome-wide associations observed in aADHD among GWA signals of dimensions of oppositionality (defiant/vindictive and irritable dimensions) in childhood ADHD (cADHD). No single polymorphism reached genome-wide significance (P<5.00E-08). The strongest signal in aADHD was observed at rs10826548, within a long noncoding RNA gene (beta = -1.66, standard error (SE) = 0.34, P = 1.07E-06), closely followed by rs35974940 in the neurotrimin gene (beta = 3.23, SE = 0.67, P = 1.26E-06). The top GWA SNPs observed in aADHD showed significant enrichment of signals from both the defiant/vindictive dimension (Fisher's P-value = 2.28E-06) and the irritable dimension in cADHD (Fisher's P-value = 0.0061). In sum, our results identify a number of biologically interesting markers possibly underlying childhood aggressiveness and provide targets for further genetic exploration of aggressiveness across psychiatric disorders.