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Optogenetic manipulation of a value-coding pathway from the primate caudate tail facilitates saccadic gaze shift. Nat Commun 2020; 11:1876. [PMID: 32312986 PMCID: PMC7171130 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-15802-y] [Citation(s) in RCA: 18] [Impact Index Per Article: 4.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 10/03/2019] [Accepted: 03/10/2020] [Indexed: 12/20/2022] Open
Abstract
In the primate basal ganglia, the caudate tail (CDt) encodes the historical values (good or bad) of visual objects (i.e., stable values), and electrical stimulation of CDt evokes saccadic eye movements. However, it is still unknown how output from CDt conveys stable value signals to govern behavior. Here, we apply a pathway-selective optogenetic manipulation to elucidate how such value information modulates saccades. We express channelrhodopsin-2 in CDt delivered by viral vector injections. Selective optical activation of CDt-derived terminals in the substantia nigra pars reticulata (SNr) inhibits SNr neurons. Notably, these SNr neurons show inhibitory responses to good objects. Furthermore, the optical stimulation causes prolonged excitation of visual-saccadic neurons in the superior colliculus (SC), and induces contralateral saccades. These SC neurons respond more strongly to good than to bad objects in the contralateral hemifield. The present results demonstrate that CDt facilitates saccades toward good objects by serial inhibitory pathways through SNr.
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Heritability and molecular genetic basis of antisaccade eye tracking error rate: a genome-wide association study. Psychophysiology 2014; 51:1272-84. [PMID: 25387707 PMCID: PMC4238043 DOI: 10.1111/psyp.12347] [Citation(s) in RCA: 20] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/29/2022]
Abstract
Antisaccade deficits reflect abnormalities in executive function linked to various disorders including schizophrenia, externalizing psychopathology, and neurological conditions. We examined the genetic bases of antisaccade error in a sample of community-based twins and parents (N = 4,469). Biometric models showed that about half of the variance in the antisaccade response was due to genetic factors and half due to nonshared environmental factors. Molecular genetic analyses supported these results, showing that the heritability accounted for by common molecular genetic variants approximated biometric estimates. Genome-wide analyses revealed several SNPs as well as two genes-B3GNT7 and NCL-on Chromosome 2 associated with antisaccade error. SNPs and genes hypothesized to be associated with antisaccade error based on prior work, although generating some suggestive findings for MIR137, GRM8, and CACNG2, could not be confirmed.
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Genome-wide scans of genetic variants for psychophysiological endophenotypes: a methodological overview. Psychophysiology 2014; 51:1207-24. [PMID: 25387703 PMCID: PMC4231489 DOI: 10.1111/psyp.12343] [Citation(s) in RCA: 22] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/07/2023]
Abstract
This article provides an introductory overview of the investigative strategy employed to evaluate the genetic basis of 17 endophenotypes examined as part of a 20-year data collection effort from the Minnesota Center for Twin and Family Research. Included are characterization of the study samples, descriptive statistics for key properties of the psychophysiological measures, and rationale behind the steps taken in the molecular genetic study design. The statistical approach included (a) biometric analysis of twin and family data, (b) heritability analysis using 527,829 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), (c) genome-wide association analysis of these SNPs and 17,601 autosomal genes, (d) follow-up analyses of candidate SNPs and genes hypothesized to have an association with each endophenotype, (e) rare variant analysis of nonsynonymous SNPs in the exome, and (f) whole genome sequencing association analysis using 27 million genetic variants. These methods were used in the accompanying empirical articles comprising this special issue, Genome-Wide Scans of Genetic Variants for Psychophysiological Endophenotypes.
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Functional consequences of oculomotor disorders in hereditary cerebellar ataxias. CEREBELLUM (LONDON, ENGLAND) 2013; 12:396-405. [PMID: 23239280 DOI: 10.1007/s12311-012-0433-z] [Citation(s) in RCA: 12] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/24/2023]
Abstract
Saccadic eye movements are traditionally cited as an especially successful combination of accuracy and velocity, such high level of performances being believed to be crucial for optimal vision. Although the structures subtending these properties are now well recognized, very little is known about the functional consequences on visually guided behaviors of reduced saccade performances, i.e., slowness and/or inaccuracy. We therefore investigated the impact of such impairments in patients with spino-cerebellar and Friedreich ataxia, i.e., diseases known to affect both saccade parameters. Subjects performed a classical eye movement task, in order to quantify saccade inaccuracy and/or slowness, a visually search task and a reading task and completed a questionnaire designed to evaluate their perceived visual discomfort in daily activities. The first main result was that saccade impairments did have an impact on visually guided behaviors, resulting in an increased time for target detection, especially when accurate foveation was needed, and in an increased reading time. The main responsible oculomotor factor was increased variability of saccade accuracy, and the least responsible factor was reduced saccade velocity. The second main result was that saccade disorders did not induce significant subjective discomfort, since no correlations were found between the results of the questionnaire and saccade parameters. These results emphasize the functional impact of increased variable error of saccade accuracy and question the rationale of high saccade velocities. The discrepancy between objective and subjective measures underlines the largely unconscious aspect of saccade control and leads us to consider the need for an adapted therapy.
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Abstract
BACKGROUND The gene encoding the regulator of G-protein signaling subtype 4 (RGS4), located on chromosome 1q23-3, has been proposed as a possible susceptibility gene for schizophrenia and has been specifically linked to prefrontal cortical structural and functional integrity. METHOD The effects of four core single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) within the RGS4 gene on oculomotor parameters in a battery of oculomotor tasks (saccade, antisaccade, smooth eye pursuit, fixation) were investigated in a sample of 2243 young male military conscripts. RESULTS The risk allele of RGS4SNP18 was found to be associated with two variables of antisaccade performance, increased error rate and variation in the correct antisaccade latency. By contrast, the same allele and also the risk allele of RGS4SNP4 led to an improvement in smooth eye pursuit performance (increased gain). Structural equation modeling confirmed that the combined gene variation of RGS4SNP4 and RGS4SNP18 was a significant predictor of antisaccade but not smooth eye pursuit performance. CONCLUSIONS These results provide evidence for a specific effect of schizophrenia-related RGS4 genotype variations to prefrontal dysfunction measured by oculomotor indices of performance in normal individuals, further validating the hypothesis that RGS4 is related to prefrontal dysfunction in schizophrenia.
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Abstract
Initiation and inhibition of saccadic eye movements has been shown to be impaired in patients with Huntington's disease (HD) and premanifest gene carriers (PMGC), and may provide biomarkers useful in tracking phenotypic change. Computerized behavioral tests of prosaccade latency and disinhibition presented to 31 non-gene carriers (NGC), 25 PMGC, and 12 HD patients. These tests provided quantitative performance measures without use of eye-tracking equipment. Significant differences on saccade tests were found, with PMGC intermediate between NGC and HD patients. Saccade latency discriminated PMGC from NGC, whereas saccade disinhibition discriminated PMGC from HD patients. Results suggest utility of behavioral saccade measures as premanifest indicators of phenoconversion in HD.
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Antisaccade deficit is present in young first-episode patients with schizophrenia but not in their healthy young siblings. Psychol Med 2008; 38:871-875. [PMID: 17949519 DOI: 10.1017/s0033291707001894] [Citation(s) in RCA: 20] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/07/2022]
Abstract
BACKGROUND Results of studies on antisaccade (AS) deficit in relatives of patients with schizophrenia are inconclusive. We hypothesized that AS performance in siblings of patients with schizophrenia is worse than in healthy controls and better than in patients with schizophrenia. METHOD We included 55 first-episode patients with schizophrenia, 28 healthy siblings and 36 healthy controls to evaluate AS performance. Eye movements were measured electromagnetically by the double magnetic induction (DMI) method. RESULTS Patients with schizophrenia had a significantly higher error rate than siblings (d=0.86, p<0.0001) and controls (d=1.35, p<0.0001). Siblings had a higher mean error rate than healthy controls but this did not reach significance (d=0.56, p=0.29). The intra-class correlation (ICC) was 0.33 for the error rate. Mean AS gain was higher in siblings than in patients (d=0.75, p=0.004) and controls (d=0.6, p=0.05). The ICC was 0.08. CONCLUSION As parameters in strictly screened healthy young siblings of young first-episode patients with schizophrenia are comparable to results found in studies investigating older relatives. However, the statistical results (i.e. the ICCs) suggest that there is little evidence of shared environmental or genetic factors on error rate variation.
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Abstract
BACKGROUND Ocular-motor inhibition errors and saccadic hypometria occur at elevated rates in biological relatives of schizophrenic patients. The memory-guided saccade (MS) paradigm requires a subject to inhibit reflexive saccades (RSs) and to programme a delayed saccade towards a remembered target. METHOD MS, RS, and central fixation (CF) tasks were administered to 16 patients who met the criteria for DSM-IV schizophrenia, 19 of their psychiatrically healthy siblings, and 18 controls. RESULTS Patients and siblings showed elevated MS error rates reflecting a failure to inhibit RSs to a visible target, as required by the task. In contrast to controls, prior errors did not improve MS accuracy in patients and siblings. CONCLUSIONS The specific characteristics of the elevated MS error rate help to clarify the nature of the disinhibition impairment found in schizophrenics and their healthy siblings. Failure to inhibit premature saccades and to improve the accuracy of subsequent volitional saccades implicates a deficit in spatial working-memory integration, mental representation and/or motor learning processes in schizophrenia.
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Complete deletion of the aprataxin gene: ataxia with oculomotor apraxia type 1 with severe phenotype and cognitive deficit. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 2008; 79:234-6. [PMID: 18202221 DOI: 10.1136/jnnp.2007.127233] [Citation(s) in RCA: 11] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/12/2022]
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Successful multi-site measurement of antisaccade performance deficits in schizophrenia. Schizophr Res 2007; 89:320-9. [PMID: 17023145 DOI: 10.1016/j.schres.2006.08.010] [Citation(s) in RCA: 60] [Impact Index Per Article: 3.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 04/28/2006] [Revised: 08/08/2006] [Accepted: 08/11/2006] [Indexed: 10/24/2022]
Abstract
The antisaccade task is a promising schizophrenia endophenotype; it is stable over time and reflects neurophysiological deficits present in both schizophrenia subjects and their first-degree relatives. Meaningful genetic research requires large sample sizes that are best ascertained using multi-site study designs. To establish the criterion validity of the antisaccade task in a multi-site design, the Consortium on the Genetics of Schizophrenia (COGS) examined whether seven sites could detect previously reported antisaccade deficits in schizophrenia subjects. Investigators presented 3 blocks of 20 antisaccade stimuli to 143 schizophrenia subjects and 195 comparison subjects. Frequent collaborator communication, standardized training, and ongoing quality assurance optimized testing uniformity. Data were discarded from only 1.2% of subjects due to poor quality, reflecting the high fidelity of data collection and scoring methods. All sites detected a significant difference in the proportion of correct antisaccades between schizophrenia and comparison subjects (p<.02 at all sites); group differences in gain and latency were less robust. Regression analyses to adjust for the effects of group, site, age, gender, smoking, and parental education on the proportion of correct antisaccades revealed a significant effect of group, site, and age but no effect of gender, smoking, or parental education, and no group-by-site interactions. Intraclass correlations between proportion of correct antisaccades across the blocks of stimuli ranged from 0.87 to 0.93, demonstrating good within-session reliability at sites. These results confirm previous findings of antisaccade deficits in schizophrenia subjects and support the use of the antisaccade task as a potential schizophrenia endophenotype in multi-site genetic studies.
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Brain activation during antisaccades in unaffected relatives of schizophrenic patients. Biol Psychiatry 2006; 59:530-5. [PMID: 16165103 DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2005.07.030] [Citation(s) in RCA: 63] [Impact Index Per Article: 3.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 03/09/2005] [Revised: 06/30/2005] [Accepted: 07/20/2005] [Indexed: 11/30/2022]
Abstract
BACKGROUND Schizophrenia patients have difficulty inhibiting automatic saccades. Many studies have failed to resolve whether healthy first-degree relatives share the same deficit. Measures of brain activity may be more sensitive than behavioral measures. In patients, the saccadic inhibition deficit has been related to impaired frontostriatal functioning. This study attempts to establish whether this abnormality is also present in unaffected relatives of patients. METHODS Functional brain images were acquired during prosaccades and antisaccades in 16 control subjects and 16 unaffected siblings of schizophrenia patients using an event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging design. Eye movements were measured during scanning. RESULTS The task activated a network of regions corresponding to the oculomotor system. Siblings and control subjects did not differ during execution of prosaccades. During antisaccades, siblings did not activate the caudate nucleus. Siblings and control subjects did not differ on the percentage of antisaccade errors. CONCLUSIONS Siblings did not appropriately activate the striatum during antisaccades, similar to what has been reported in patients. Siblings, however, did not make significantly more errors during antisaccades, indicating that they were able to compensate for the inactive caudate. Future research is needed to assess the potential of this striatal deficit as (genetic) risk factor for schizophrenia.
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Abstract
OBJECTIVE Deficiency in antisaccade performance has been proposed as a schizophrenia endophenotype. METHOD The authors assessed performance on an antisaccade task (and a prosaccade control condition) by 10 monozygotic twin pairs discordant for DSM-IV schizophrenia and 10 monozygotic healthy twin pairs matched for age, sex, and parental socioeconomic status. The authors computed antisaccade gain, latency, and error rate, as well as prosaccade gain and latency. RESULTS The schizophrenic twins made more antisaccade reflexive errors than the nonschizophrenic co-twins and comparison twins, who did not significantly differ from each other. The nonschizophrenic members of discordant pairs performed worse than the comparison twins on antisaccade gain and latency but did not differ from their schizophrenic co-twins on these variables. There were no differences on prosaccade performance. Antisaccade errors were correlated with negative symptoms in the patients. CONCLUSIONS Antisaccade spatial accuracy and latency deficits may serve as markers of genetic liability for schizophrenia.
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Are eye movement abnormalities indicators of genetic vulnerability to schizophrenia? Eur Psychiatry 2006; 20:339-45. [PMID: 16018927 DOI: 10.1016/j.eurpsy.2004.12.010] [Citation(s) in RCA: 29] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 10/20/2003] [Revised: 12/01/2004] [Accepted: 12/29/2004] [Indexed: 11/18/2022] Open
Abstract
UNLABELLED Fifty to eighty-five percent of schizophrenic patients are impaired on ocular pursuit paradigms. However, results regarding the relatives are more discordant. The aim of this study was to investigate whether eye movement disorders could be a vulnerability marker of schizophrenia. METHOD Twenty-one schizophrenic patients (DSM-IV), 31 first-degree relatives of those patients without schizophrenic spectrum disorders, and two groups of healthy controls matched by age and sex were included. Three oculomotor tasks (smooth pursuit, reflexive saccades and antisaccades) were used. RESULTS Patients had a lower averaged gain (P= 0.035) during smooth pursuit than controls, made less correct visually guided saccades (P< 0.001) and more antisaccades errors (P= 0.002) than controls. In contrast, none of the comparison between the relatives and their controls was significant. CONCLUSION Schizophrenic patients were impaired on smooth pursuit and antisaccade paradigms. None of these impairments was, however, observed in their first-degree relatives. Our results suggest that the eye movement parameters tested could not be considered as vulnerability markers for schizophrenia.
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Saccadic eye movement task identifies cognitive deficits in children with schizophrenia, but not in unaffected child relatives. J Child Psychol Psychiatry 2005; 46:1354-62. [PMID: 16313436 DOI: 10.1111/j.1469-7610.2005.01437.x] [Citation(s) in RCA: 29] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/29/2022]
Abstract
BACKGROUND The delayed oculomotor response (DOR) task requires response inhibition followed by movement of gaze towards a known spatial location without a current stimulus. Abnormalities in response inhibition and in the spatial accuracy of the eye movement are found in individuals with schizophrenia and in many of their relatives, supporting the use of these saccadic abnormalities as endophenotypes in genetic studies. It is unknown whether school-age children, either with psychosis or as relatives of a schizophrenic proband, can be included. METHOD One hundred eighty-seven children, ages 5.8-16.0 years - 45 children with childhood-onset schizophrenia, 64 children with a first-degree relative with schizophrenia, and 84 typically developing children - completed DOR tasks with 1 and 3 second delays. RESULTS Children with childhood-onset schizophrenia demonstrated impaired response inhibition and impaired spatial accuracy compared to both relatives and typicals; however, relatives and typicals did not differ from each other. CONCLUSIONS Children with childhood-onset schizophrenia have saccadic abnormalities similar to those found in adults with schizophrenia, supporting the continuity of executive function deficits in childhood-onset with adolescent and adult-onset schizophrenia. However, saccadic tasks are not sensitive to genetic risk in non-psychotic children and 6-15-year-old children should not be included in genetic studies utilizing this endophenotype.
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Abstract
OBJECTIVE The authors evaluated concordance rates among three electrophysiological measures in patients with schizophrenia, nonschizophrenic first-degree relatives of schizophrenia patients, and healthy comparison subjects. The purpose of the study was to provide data for defining a common endophenotype for genetic studies of schizophrenia and for improving the criteria for diagnosis. METHOD P50 event-related potential inhibition, antisaccade, and smooth pursuit eye tracking paradigms were measured. Data for all three paradigms were available for 81 patients with schizophrenia, 25 parents of patients with schizophrenia, and 60 healthy comparison subjects. RESULTS The schizophrenia patients and the patients' parents showed a high rate of inhibitory deficits measured by the P50 inhibition and antisaccade paradigms. Both groups had a high prevalence of eye tracking dysfunction. Smooth pursuit gain and the error rate in the antisaccade paradigm were significantly correlated in the schizophrenia patients and the parents, whereas P50 inhibition showed no correlation with smooth pursuit gain or antisaccade paradigm measurements. CONCLUSIONS Despite superficial similarities, two paradigms designed to measure central inhibition processes (antisaccade and P50 inhibition) do not appear to reflect the same neurobiological substrates. In contrast, the convergence in performance data for the antisaccade and eye tracking paradigms suggests that the neural circuitry underlying these tasks may overlap. P50 inhibition and antisaccade errors were the optimal paradigms for discrimination between comparison subjects, patients with schizophrenia, and the parents of patients with schizophrenia.
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Abstract
We assessed maximal saccade velocity (MSV) in 82 spinocerebellar ataxia type 2 (SCA2) patients and 80 controls, correlating it to disease duration, polyglutamine expansion size, age at onset, ataxia score, age, and sex. Little overlap with normal values was found even at earliest stages. Stepwise linear regression analysis showed that 60-degree MSV was strongly influenced by polyglutamine size and less by disease duration, whereas the reverse was found for ataxia score. Saccade velocity thus is a sensitive, quite specific, and objective endophenotype, useful to search polyglutamine modifier genes.
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Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW During the past year a number of studies have been published on eye movement dysfunction in patients with psychiatric disease. According to the mainstream of modern neuropsychiatric research, these studies cover either genetic aspects or the results of pharmacological manipulation. RECENT FINDINGS A few studies addressed impaired smooth pursuit eye movements (eye tracking dysfunction) in unaffected relatives of psychiatric patients, and were important in excluding non-specific effects (e.g. medication) and isolating genetic predisposition to the disease. This predisposition could be demonstrated in families of schizophrenic patients irrespective of whether the index case was sporadic or familial. One large study demonstrated pathological distributions of various parameters of smooth pursuit eye movement performance in groups of schizophrenic patients and their relatives. However, another study challenged the specificity of eye tracking dysfunction as a trait marker for schizophrenia by showing that its prevalence was identical among relatives of patients with affective disorder and schizophrenia. Eye tracking dysfunction was associated with two gene polymorphisms that interfere with dopamine metabolism and are thus reasonable candidate genes for the predisposition to schizophrenia. The influence of nicotine and neuroleptic drugs on eye movement performance was studied in schizophrenic patients. Nicotine improved smooth pursuit performance in three studies, one of which attributed this finding to enhanced attention. Two groups of schizophrenic patients treated with two different atypical neuroleptic drugs, risperidone and olanzapine, did not differ in a battery of saccadic tasks. SUMMARY Eye movements provide an important tool to measure pharmacological effects in patients and unravel genetic traits in psychiatric disease.
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Smooth pursuit and antisaccade performance evidence trait stability in schizophrenia patients and their relatives. Int J Psychophysiol 2003; 49:139-46. [PMID: 12919716 DOI: 10.1016/s0167-8760(03)00101-6] [Citation(s) in RCA: 58] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/19/2022]
Abstract
Several forms of eye movement dysfunction (EMD) have been widely regarded as candidate endophenotypes of schizophrenia, ultimately capable of identifying individuals carrying schizophrenia susceptibility genes and elucidating the pathophysiology of schizophrenia. As an indication of their trait-like status, candidate endophenotypes optimally evidence stability over time. However, there have been few published reports of test-retest reliability of several forms of EMD in schizophrenia patients and their relatives. In the current investigation, schizophrenia patients and the first-degree biological relatives of schizophrenia patients (n=15) were administered by an eye movement battery including smooth pursuit, antisaccade and prosaccade tasks, and re-tested after an average of 1.82 years (range=14-24 months). Adequate test-retest reliabilities of smooth pursuit closed-loop gain (Pearson r=0.72), antisaccade error rate (r=0.73), saccade reaction time to correct antisaccade responses (r=0.73), and prosaccade hypometria (r=0.72) were observed. Lower reliabilities were obtained for smooth pursuit open-loop gain (r=0.52) and prosaccade reaction time (r=0.43). The results are supportive of the trait-like characteristics of particular forms of EMD in schizophrenia families and of the candidacy of EMD as an endophenotypic marker of schizophrenia.
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Eye movement dysfunction in schizophrenia: a heritable characteristic for enhancing phenotype definition. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF MEDICAL GENETICS 2003; 97:72-6. [PMID: 10813807 DOI: 10.1002/(sici)1096-8628(200021)97:1<72::aid-ajmg10>3.0.co;2-l] [Citation(s) in RCA: 56] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/07/2022]
Abstract
The occurrence of ocular motor dysfunction in schizophrenia patients and their first-degree biological relatives is remarkably consistent, suggesting that abnormal smooth pursuit and saccadic oculomotion are heritable characteristics that can be used to identify gene carriers for schizophrenia. Saccadic system dysfunction probably reflects a generalized deficit in prefrontal cortical functioning, rather than a specific deficit in saccade system functioning. Although abnormal smooth pursuit has also been associated with impaired frontal functioning, it is unclear whether these two types of dysfunction arise from the same neural pathology. Therefore, deviant smooth pursuit and saccadic oculomotion may constitute unrelated factors identifying two different types of genetic risk. Alternatively, they may derive from a single risk factor that causes (a) both types of deficits to be expressed together or (b) each type to be expressed separately as pleiotropic manifestations of the underlying genotype. Although a full complement of pursuit and saccade measures has not been examined together in family studies of schizophrenia, there is obvious value in determining how these measures relate to one another in schizophrenia families and whether they can be used in combination to enhance phenotype definition to facilitate the search for schizophrenia susceptibility genes.
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Abstract
Endophenotypes, measurable components unseen by the unaided eye along the pathway between disease and distal genotype, have emerged as an important concept in the study of complex neuropsychiatric diseases. An endophenotype may be neurophysiological, biochemical, endocrinological, neuroanatomical, cognitive, or neuropsychological (including configured self-report data) in nature. Endophenotypes represent simpler clues to genetic underpinnings than the disease syndrome itself, promoting the view that psychiatric diagnoses can be decomposed or deconstructed, which can result in more straightforward-and successful-genetic analysis. However, to be most useful, endophenotypes for psychiatric disorders must meet certain criteria, including association with a candidate gene or gene region, heritability that is inferred from relative risk for the disorder in relatives, and disease association parameters. In addition to furthering genetic analysis, endophenotypes can clarify classification and diagnosis and foster the development of animal models. The authors discuss the etymology and strategy behind the use of endophenotypes in neuropsychiatric research and, more generally, in research on other diseases with complex genetics.
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Admixture analysis of smooth pursuit eye movements in probands with schizophrenia and their relatives suggests gain and leading saccades are potential endophenotypes. Psychophysiology 2002; 39:809-19. [PMID: 12462508 DOI: 10.1111/1469-8986.3960809] [Citation(s) in RCA: 38] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/30/2022]
Abstract
Abnormalities during a smooth pursuit eye movement task (SPEM) are common in schizophrenic patients and their relatives. This study assessed various components of SPEM performance in first-degree unaffected relatives of schizophrenic patients. One hundred individuals with schizophrenia, 137 unaffected first-degree relatives, and 69 normal controls completed a 16.7 degrees/s SPEM task. Smooth pursuit gain, catch-up saccades (CUS), large anticipatory saccades, and leading saccades (LS) were identified. Groups were compared with parametric and admixture analyses. Schizophrenic patients performed more poorly than unaffected relatives and normals on gain, CUS, and LS. Unaffected relatives were more frequently impaired than normals only on gain and LS. Relatives of childhood-onset and adult-onset probands had similar impairments. Gain and frequency of leading saccades may be genetic endophenotypes in childhood-onset and adult-onset schizophrenia.
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Saccadic eye movements are associated with a family history of alcoholism at baseline and after exposure to alcohol. Alcohol Clin Exp Res 2002; 26:1568-73. [PMID: 12394291 DOI: 10.1097/01.alc.0000033121.05006.ef] [Citation(s) in RCA: 10] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/25/2022]
Abstract
OBJECTIVE To evaluate the influence of family history of alcoholism (FHA) on the response of saccadic eye movements to alcohol. METHOD Saccadic performance was evaluated in 54 healthy adult subjects with a FHA (family history-positive) and 49 controls (family history-negative). Alcohol and placebo sessions were presented in counterbalanced order. Alcohol was administered intravenously to achieve and maintain a target breath alcohol concentration of 60 mg/100 ml (60%) for 160 min in each subject. During each session, saccadic eye movement testing was performed at baseline (before infusion of alcohol) and twice during the steady-state target breath alcohol concentration. The saccadic testing elicited visually guided saccades (VGS) and antisaccades (AS). Saccadic latency and velocity and the percentage of AS errors were quantified and analyzed using multivariate analysis of variance. RESULTS The family history-positive and family history-negative groups showed an overall difference at baseline in AS and VGS latencies and velocities in the alcohol and placebo sessions ( p= 0.006). Alcohol delayed saccades such that AS and VGS latencies increased (p = 0.0001) and slowed the execution of saccades such that peak velocities decreased ( p = 0.0002). The percentage of AS errors decreased after alcohol administration, but no significant effect of alcohol (alcohol versus placebo session) was observed (p = 0.1). Latency of AS saccades demonstrated a significant overall FHA effect (p = 0.02) and a significant interaction between FHA and response to alcohol over time (p = 0.02). CONCLUSIONS Differences in operational characteristics of the saccadic control system are associated with FHA in adult social drinkers, both at baseline and when the brain is exposed to ethanol at 60 mg/100 ml.
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Abstract
OBJECTIVE Subjects with schizotypal personality disorder demonstrate deficits in inhibition when assessed on prepulse inhibition, P50 suppression, and antisaccade paradigms. This study determined if distinct subgroups of subjects with schizotypal personality disorder could be identified on the basis of performance on these measures and whether endophenotypes could be defined for future genetic study by using measures of inhibitory function. METHOD Prepulse inhibition, P50 suppression, and antisaccade paradigms were assessed in 21 subjects with schizotypal personality disorder. RESULTS Seven subjects with schizotypal personality disorder had deficits on each paradigm; seven had no deficits on any paradigm. P50 and antisaccade deficits were present in five of the same subjects and significantly correlated. CONCLUSIONS These results suggest that P50 and antisaccade performance reflects a common endophenotype and that prepulse inhibition identifies a separate endophenotype reflecting different neurobiological substrate(s) in subjects with schizotypal personality disorder. This pattern may generalize to schizophrenia spectrum disorder patients.
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A form of inherited cerebellar ataxia with saccadic intrusions, increased saccadic speed, sensory neuropathy, and myoclonus. Ann N Y Acad Sci 2002; 956:441-4. [PMID: 11960835 DOI: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.2002.tb02850.x] [Citation(s) in RCA: 26] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/28/2022]
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Abstract
Oculomotor abnormalities have long been recognized in Huntington's disease (HD). The precise correlation between them and other clinical findings has not yet been determined. Using videonystagmography, we studied reflexive, visually guided horizontal saccades in 32 patients with genetically confirmed HD: nine female and 23 male patients, including six with young onset HD (YOHD), 19 with adult onset HD (AOD), and seven with late onset HD (LOHD). Huntington's patients exhibited increased saccade latency (P < 0.05), decreased saccade velocity (P < 0.0005), and impaired saccade accuracy (P < 0.01). A significant difference between the different groups of patients could be determined, and YOHD was characterized by normal latency and decreased saccade velocity while LOHD showed increased saccade latency but normal velocity. Furthermore, we found a significant difference between the genetic data (length of CAG-repeats) and saccadic abnormalities, with higher repeat numbers corresponding to shorter latency and decreased velocity, as in YOHD. The study of saccade parameters might be useful as an objective method for testing the effectiveness of future therapies.
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Saccadic disinhibition in patients with acute and remitted schizophrenia and their first-degree biological relatives. Am J Psychiatry 2001; 158:100-6. [PMID: 11136640 DOI: 10.1176/appi.ajp.158.1.100] [Citation(s) in RCA: 127] [Impact Index Per Article: 5.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/30/2022]
Abstract
OBJECTIVE Performance on measures of saccadic inhibition and control was investigated in a large family study of schizophrenia to evaluate the utility of using antisaccade task performance as an endophenotypic marker of genetic liability for schizophrenia. METHOD Ninety-five patients with acute schizophrenia and 116 of their first-degree biological relatives, 13 schizophrenia patients whose illness was in full remission, 35 patients with acute psychotic affective disorder, and 109 nonpsychiatric comparison subjects were administered antisaccade and prosaccade tasks. RESULTS Both schizophrenia patient groups had a greater number of errors on the antisaccade task than did the first-degree relatives and the affective disorder group, which both had more errors than the comparison subjects. Among the first-degree relatives of the probands with acute schizophrenia, relatives of poor-performing patients performed worse on the antisaccade task than relatives of patients with good performance. Reflexive errors were not likely the result of interfering psychotic symptoms, medication, or medication side effects. Although the schizophrenia patients demonstrated other signs of saccadic abnormalities, these problems, which were not observed in their relatives even though they had high antisaccade error rates, seem unlikely to account for the higher antisaccade error rate of the schizophrenia patients. CONCLUSIONS These findings suggest that saccadic disinhibition is strongly associated with the genetic liability for schizophrenia.
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Abstract
OBJECTIVE Our aim was to review smooth pursuit eye movement (SPEM) studies in schizophrenia and groups at high risk for schizophrenia, with a view to evaluating the utility of SPEM dysfunction as a biological marker of risk for schizophrenia. METHOD Smooth pursuit eye movement studies, related saccade function and the unresolved issues in this area of schizophrenia research were addressed. The different perspectives on the trait marker status of SPEM dysfunction, provided by both high-risk studies and related developmental research were considered. Attention was also given to the relationship between eye movement dysfunction and symptom profiles. RESULTS Converging evidence points to the robust and specific nature of SPEM dysfunction in schizophrenia, and highlights the role of frontal lobe and a related network dysfunction. The vast majority of 'high risk' studies support the view that SPEM dysfunction is also genetically specific to schizophrenia, and is not simply due to the overt expression of this illness. Studies assessing SPEM in relation to symptomatology show an association with the Disorganisation syndrome in particular. CONCLUSIONS Evidence for the specificity of SPEM dysfunction to diagnosed schizophrenia, as well as to healthy individuals with a genetic vulnerability to schizophrenia, suggests that the SPEM task has efficacy as a test of gene carrier status in schizophrenia, and therefore as a trait marker of risk for schizophrenia. Future studies should seek to explore the relationships between SPEM and other eye movement dysfunctions (antisaccades, express saccades), in view of evidence that some of these dysfunctions also show specificity for schizophrenia.
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Abstract
Recent studies note abnormalities in saccadic eye movements of relatives of patients with schizophrenia. The current study examined which aspects of the saccadic system are affected, whether these saccadic abnormalities are associated with schizophrenia spectrum personality symptoms (SSP), and whether such an association is dependent on a family history of schizophrenia. Furthermore, the study examined what proportion of relatives have the saccadic abnormality(ies). Fifty-five first-degree relatives with no DSM-III-R Axis I diagnosis participated in the study. Twenty-one of these relatives experienced SSP symptoms and 34 had no Axis II diagnosis. Sixty-two subjects with no Axis I diagnosis were recruited from the community. Twenty-five experienced SSP symptoms and 37 had no Axis II diagnosis. Prosaccades (saccades toward the target) and antisaccades (saccades made in the opposite direction of the target jump) were examined. Relatives, particularly those with SSP, had difficulties with the antisaccade task as suggested by higher error rates and longer antisaccade latency. Prosaccades were not different in relatives compared to the community subjects, although the effects of field were different in the two groups on some measures. The antisaccade latency was 'abnormal' in only a small proportion (1.6%) of community subjects compared to 14.9% of all relatives (35.3% of SSP relatives and 3.3% of non-SSP relatives). Relatives of patients with schizophrenia have deficits in aspects of the saccadic system involved in generating internally driven saccades and inhibition of unwanted saccades. These deficits implicate frontal ocular motor neuronal circuitry involving frontal cortical and basal ganglia areas. These deficits are associated with SSP symptoms, but not in the absence of a blood relationship to schizophrenia. The relatively high prevalence rate of the abnormality in at-risk subjects may have relevance for use of these measures in linkage analysis.
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Abstract
Subthreshold symptoms in schizophrenia can be prodromal signs of a psychotic relapse. In people without schizophrenia, similar symptoms may indicate the presence of disorders termed schizophrenia spectrum disorders. Subthreshold schizophrenia-like symptoms may indicate a genetically transmitted higher proneness to schizophrenia. Such a higher liability to develop schizophrenia is ascertained on a symptom level. In genetic studies, asymptomatic members of a pedigree are therefore classified as unaffected although they may possess the genes in question. On a biological level, eye tracking dysfunction has been shown to fulfill certain criteria for a vulnerability indicator and therefore promises to offer more information on genetically transmitted proneness to schizophrenia even in people without psychopathological symptoms. Subthreshold symptoms may warrant treatment. The database for prophylactic treatment in populations at high risk, especially those without symptoms, is currently very small.
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Abstract
BACKGROUND Within the field of genetic schizophrenia research, eye-tracking dysfunction can be regarded as a putative trait marker in families with multiple occurrences of the disease (familial schizophrenia). We concentrated on families with single occurrences of schizophrenia (sporadic schizophrenia) to test whether a genetic factor may be present in these families as well. METHODS Eye movements were recorded using infrared oculography in eight families with sporadic schizophrenia (44 members), eight families with familial schizophrenia (66 members), and nine nonpsychotic families (77 members). Triangle-wave stimuli at 15 degrees /sec and 30 degrees /sec were used, and gains (eye velocity/target velocity), rates, and amplitudes of saccades (classified as catch-up and anticipatory saccades) were determined. RESULTS 1) In sporadic-schizophrenia families, gain values, saccade rates, and anticipatory saccade amplitudes at 30 degrees /sec differed in a statistically significant fashion from nonpsychotic families, but not from families with multiple occurrences of schizophrenia, and 2) at 30 degrees /sec, a significant effect of target direction on smooth-pursuit maintenance was observed in both sporadic- and familial-schizophrenia families. CONCLUSIONS Our results support the hypothesis that genetic factors may be present even in sporadic-schizophrenia families and may contribute to a more precise and biologically based definition of the schizophrenia phenotype in future molecular genetic analysis.
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Linkage of a composite inhibitory phenotype to a chromosome 22q locus in eight Utah families. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF MEDICAL GENETICS 1999; 88:544-50. [PMID: 10490714] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/14/2023]
Abstract
Eight Utah multigenerational families, each with three to six cases of schizophrenia, were phenotyped with two specific measures of inhibitory neurophysiological functioning, P50 auditory sensory gating (P50), and antisaccade ocular motor performance (AS). A genomewide linkage analysis was performed to screen for loci underlying a qualitative phenotype combining the P50 and AS measures. For this composite inhibitory phenotype, the strongest evidence for linkage was to the D22s315 marker on chromosome 22q (lod score = 3.55, theta = 0) under an autosomal dominant model. Simulation analyses indicate that this 3.55 lod score is unlikely to represent a false positive result. Lod scores were 2.0 or greater for markers flanking D22s315. A nonparametric linkage (NPL) analysis of the chromosome 22 data showed evidence for allele sharing over the broad region surrounding D22s315 with a maximum NPL score of 3.83 (p = .002) for all pedigrees combined.
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Abstract
OBJECTIVE In humans, interindividual variation in sensitivity to benzodiazepine drugs may correlate with behavioral variation, including vulnerability to disease states such as alcoholism. In the rat, variation in alcohol and benzodiazepine sensitivity has been correlated with an inherited variant of the GABAA alpha 6 receptor. The authors detected a Pro385Ser [1236C > T] amino acid substitution in the human GABAA alpha 6 that may influence alcohol sensitivity. In this pilot study, they evaluated the contribution of this polymorphism to benzodiazepine sensitivity. METHOD Sensitivity to diazepam was assessed in 51 children of alcoholics by using two eye movement measures: peak saccadic velocity and average smooth pursuit gain. Association analysis was performed with saccadic velocity and smooth pursuit gain as dependent variables and comparing Pro385/Ser385 heterozygotes and Pro385/Pro385 homozygotes. RESULTS The Pro385Ser genotype was associated with less diazepam-induced impairment of saccadic velocity but not with smooth pursuit gain. CONCLUSIONS The Pro385Ser genotype may play a role in benzodiazepine sensitivity and conditions, such as alcoholism, that may be correlated with this trait.
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Abstract
OBJECTIVE Family studies have shown that abnormalities of smooth pursuit eye movement are increased in the adult relatives of schizophrenic probands as well as in the probands themselves. More recently, an inability of schizophrenic subjects to inhibit reflexive saccades reliably has been shown. This study aimed to test the hypothesis that the latter dysfunction is part of the extended schizophrenia phenotype. METHOD With the use of infrared oculography, measurements of reflexive saccades and antisaccades were undertaken in 29 probands with schizophrenia, 50 of their nonpsychotic first-degree relatives, and 38 unrelated healthy volunteers. RESULTS Probands, relatives, and healthy subjects showed no overall differences in the generation of reflexive saccades. However, in the antisaccade task, probands showed more saccadic distractibility when they were required to inhibit reflexive saccades. Analysis of corrective saccades showed that this was not due to failed comprehension or motivation. Relatives of the probands with high saccadic distractibility showed a higher distractibility rate than relatives of the probands with normal distractibility. Across all subjects, females showed a higher rate of distractibility errors than males. CONCLUSIONS The ability to suppress reflexive saccades is an objective neurocognitive measure that is impaired in schizophrenic patients and in a proportion of their biological relatives. This antisaccade abnormality may be a vulnerability marker in a subset of schizophrenic patients and their families.
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Abstract
OBJECTIVE To quantify the oculomotor features of the common spinocerebellar ataxia (SCA) syndromes. SETTING University ataxia clinic. PATIENTS Twenty probands with documented SCA mutations. METHODS Electro-oculographic recordings of saccadic, smooth pursuit, optokinetic, vestibular, and visual-vestibular eye movements. RESULTS Distinct phenotype and genotype patterns were identified with modest overlap between patterns. Slowing of saccade peak velocities occurred only in SCA1 and SCA2, being present in 100% of patients with SCA2. Impaired vestibulo-ocular reflex gain occurred with SCA3 only. Patients with SCA6 had prominent deficits in smooth tracking but normal saccade velocities and vestibuloocular reflex gain. CONCLUSIONS The oculomotor findings are consistent with pure cerebellar involvement in SCA6, pontine involvement in SCA1 and SCA2, and vestibular nerve or nuclei involvement in SCA3. These phenotypes can be useful for clinical diagnosis and for investigating the mechanism of system specificity with the SCA syndromes.
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Influences of chorion type on saccadic eye movements in twins. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 1998; 39:2186-90. [PMID: 9761300] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/09/2023] Open
Abstract
PURPOSE The influence of genetic and prenatal environmental factors on characteristics of saccadic performance were evaluated in young monozygotic (MZ) twins (8-19 years old) of known chorion type. METHODS Saccadic eye movements were recorded using an infrared system. Saccadic latency, accuracy, and parameters of amplitude-peak velocity exponential equation (main sequence) were quantified. RESULTS Intraclass correlations of saccadic parameters differed significantly from zero for monochorionic and dichorionic MZ twins. The within-pair mean squares were significantly less, and intraclass correlations were significantly higher in monochorionic than in dichorionic twins for latency and were similar for other saccadic parameters (accuracy, slope of main sequence, and peak velocity for 15 degrees saccades). CONCLUSIONS These findings confirmed previous reports that saccadic parameters of MZ twins are significantly correlated and indicated that similarity of these parameters seen in MZ twins may be driven both by genetic and by prenatal environmental factors.
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Abstract
Difficulties with inhibiting inappropriate responses, i.e. disinhibition, and problems with spatial memory are both presumed to be a part of the phenotypic expression of the genetic risk for schizophrenia. Schizophrenic probands are impaired on saccadic eye movement tasks which require (a) response inhibition to prepotent stimuli and (b) generation of an accurate response to a remembered or calculated spatial location, but it is unknown how these deficits are inherited. Sixteen schizophrenic probands, their 32 parents, and two normal control groups completed a delayed oculomotor response and an antisaccade task. The parents with a positive ancestral family history for chronic psychosis (n = 8) were presumed to be more likely than their family history-negative spouses to be genetic carriers for schizophrenia. Probands and their positive family history parents had more failures of response inhibition than did normal control groups. However, it was the probands and their negative family history spouses who demonstrated impaired accuracy of the remembered- or antisaccades. Disinhibition may be closely tied to a specific genetic risk for schizophrenia. However, a second familial factor related to the maintenance or manipulation of spatial information may also contribute to the genetic risk of the full clinical disorder.
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Specific measures account for most of the variance in qualitative ratings of smooth pursuit eye movements in schizophrenia. ARCHIVES OF GENERAL PSYCHIATRY 1998; 55:184-6. [PMID: 9477936 DOI: 10.1001/archpsyc.55.2.184] [Citation(s) in RCA: 5] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/06/2023]
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Eye-tracking dysfunction in offspring from the New York High-Risk Project: diagnostic specificity and the role of attention. Psychiatry Res 1997; 66:121-30. [PMID: 9075276 DOI: 10.1016/s0165-1781(96)02975-7] [Citation(s) in RCA: 63] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/04/2023]
Abstract
Eye tracking abnormalities were studied in the offspring of schizophrenic, unipolar depressed and bipolar probands from the New York High-Risk Project to examine their familial specificity. Offspring of schizophrenic and depressed probands both had significant global performance deficits based on spectral purity measurements, but only the offspring of schizophrenic probands had an increased rate of intrusive anticipatory saccades. The greater specificity of high anticipatory saccade rate than global performance impairment suggests that this eye movement abnormality may provide a more specific biological marker of risk for schizophrenia than the global measure of eye tracking performance used in this study. Attention facilitation effectively normalized all performance deficits in the offspring of schizophrenic patients, suggesting that a problem sustaining focused visual attention may contribute to eye tracking deficits observed in the relatives of schizophrenic probands.
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Abstract
OBJECTIVE Disordered smooth-pursuit eye movements (SPEM) and, specifically, small anticipatory saccades that disrupt SPEM have been hypothesized to be a marker of genetic vulnerability to schizophrenia. This study compares SPEM in children of schizophrenic parents with normally developing control children to assess whether SPEM abnormalities are also present in a subset of at-risk children. METHOD With infrared oculography, SPEM was examined in 13 children of schizophrenic parents and 19 normally developing controls (aged 6 to 15 years). Measures of smooth-pursuit gain and root mean square error were used in addition to more specific measures of catch-up saccades and anticipatory saccades. RESULTS Children of schizophrenic parents differed from normally developing controls on gain and root mean square error, but not on catch-up saccades. Small anticipatory saccades were significantly more frequent in the at-risk group. The percentage of total eye movements due to anticipatory saccades identified 54% of the at-risk group (compared with none of the control group) as performing more than two standard deviations above (worse than) the control mean. CONCLUSIONS The presence of increased anticipatory saccades is evidence for an oculomotor dysfunction that may be a phenotype of the genetic risk for schizophrenia, expressed years prior to the possible development of clinical illness.
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Saccadic characteristics of monozygotic and dizygotic twins before and after alcohol administration. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 1996; 37:339-44. [PMID: 8603838] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/31/2023] Open
Abstract
PURPOSE To evaluate the degree of heritability in the latency, accuracy, and peak velocity of reflexive saccades in young adult monozygotic (MZ) and dizygotic (DZ) twins before and after the administration of a single dose of ethanol. METHODS Saccades were recorded using a scleral search coil before and after alcohol consumption, and data were analyzed offline. Estimates of heritability based in intraclass correlations (ICCs) and using a maximum likelihood estimates of genetic variance were calculated for the saccadic measures made before and after alcohol, as well as for the changes in latency, accuracy, and velocity. RESULTS Intraclass correlations for MZ twins (rMZ) were highly significant; those for DZ twins (rDZ) were not significantly different from zero. This disparity between rMZ and rDZ suggests either multiple gene interactions or in utero environmental differences in the MZ twins. Alcohol significantly prolonged latency, reduced accuracy, and lowered peak velocity. Although the changes after alcohol were not significant, heritability values increased in all three measures after alcohol administration. CONCLUSIONS Latency, accuracy, and peak velocity appear to be controlled by multiple genes or to depend on prenatal environmental factors. Even a single low dose of alcohol appeared to enhance heritability measures. Differences seen between ICCs for latency, accuracy, and velocity after alcohol administration suggest that developmental control of the neural mechanisms underlying each measure may vary.
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Oculomotor apraxia in a case of Gaucher's disease with homozygous T1448C mutation. ZHONGHUA MINGUO XIAO ER KE YI XUE HUI ZA ZHI [JOURNAL]. ZHONGHUA MINGUO XIAO ER KE YI XUE HUI 1996; 37:52-5. [PMID: 8936012] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/03/2023]
Abstract
We report a 10-month-old male infant with Type 2 Gaucher's disease. In addition to gradual arrest of neurological development, laryngospasm, opisthotonus, and limb rigidity, he presented characteristic oculomotor apraxia. History taking revealed that he had had abnormal horizontal gaze and had to turn his head to follow an object instead of moving the eyes alone. His eyes were in a divergent position while he was in a deep coma; however, when consciousness improved, he could open eyes with neutral eye position. Due to the impairment of reflex saccades, the doll's eye phenomenon was not reliable in evaluating the brainstem function when he was in the comatose stage. His leukocyte glucocerebrosidase activity was very low, but the typical Gaucher cell was absent in the sample of bone marrow aspiration. Molecular analysis by amplification refractory mutation system (ARMS) screening proved that he was a homozygote for T1448C mutation. To our knowledge, the T1448C gene frequency of Chinese Gaucher's disease is high. Thus, the ARMS screening method is applicable for further genetic diagnosis of Chinese Gaucher patients. Finally, this successful genetic diagnosis makes it possible in the future to perform prenatal diagnosis.
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Abstract
Hyperekplexia is an autosomal dominant disorder characterized by excessive startle responses followed by a temporary generalized stiffness. The startle response is generated in the medial bulbopontine reticular formation in the lower brainstem. The pulse generator of horizontal saccadic eye movements is localized in the pontine paramedian reticular formation. Measurements of horizontal visually evoked random saccades, antisaccades, and saccades toward remembered targets were performed in seven patients with familial hyperekplexia and seven health age-matched controls. The peak velocity of all three kinds of saccades was reduced (p < 0.0001) compared with that of controls. Latencies were marginally longer in the patient group (p = 0.0486). Saccadic gains did not differ between patients and controls. The ability to make antisaccades, saccades toward remembered targets, and the ability to suppress reflex saccades are similar in patients and controls. These data suggest that the origin of the excessive startle response is probably more due to a different modulation in the brainstem than to altered cortical influence.
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Comparative assessment of saccadic eye movements, psychomotor and cognitive performance in schizophrenics, their first-degree relatives and control subjects. Acta Psychiatr Scand 1995; 91:195-201. [PMID: 7625195 DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0447.1995.tb09766.x] [Citation(s) in RCA: 15] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/26/2023]
Abstract
This study is aimed at detecting biological markers for schizophrenia. For this purpose, a total of 70 subjects (21 schizophrenic patients, 27 first-degree relatives and 22 controls) performed a series of tests assessing various attentional, psychomotor and cognitive functions and saccadic eye movements. The schizophrenics performed significantly poorer than both high-risk and control subjects in most of the tests demanding attention, concentration and psychomotor speed (d2 concentration test, reaction times and Stroop test of perceptual interference) as well as cognition (Wechsler intelligence scales). On the other hand, these tests did not differentiate between the high-risk and control subjects. This distinction, however, could be made by two other parameters: hypometria score of saccadic eye movements and ratio of verbal to performance intelligence scores. Both parameters were significantly increased in both the schizophrenic and the high-risk group, distinguishing both from the control group. The relevance of these findings in indicating a schizophrenic disposition is discussed.
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Abstract
Although the range of normal ocular motor performance is broad, little is known about the sources of variability. Genetic transmission of eye movement deficits has been described but such possible control of normal function has been little investigated. Characteristics of smooth pursuit and saccades can be examined for the degree of concordance in related individuals. In this pilot study, we studied saccades and pursuit in eight monozygotic (MZ) twin pairs. The statistical analysis of the data used the intraclass correlation of MZ twins (rMZ) to estimate what fraction the covariance of the twin pairs was of the population variance. All saccadic measures showed significant MZ correlations (p < 0.05). Smooth pursuit gains were even more highly correlated (p < 0.001). These results indicate considerable similarity within pairs of twins, particularly for horizontal smooth pursuit, and suggest that larger studies on monozygotic and dizygotic twins would be desirable, to help separate out the relative contributions of environmental and genetic factors.
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Saccadic system functioning among schizophrenia patients and their first-degree biological relatives. JOURNAL OF ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY 1994; 103:277-87. [PMID: 8040497] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/28/2023]
Abstract
In Study 1, 30 schizophrenia Ss and 27 nonpsychiatric comparison Ss were presented with a fixation task, a visually guided reflexive saccade (prosaccade) task, a predictive tracking task (0.4-Hz square wave), and an antisaccade task. The 2 groups did not differ on either the fixation or prosaccade tasks. Schizophrenia Ss had an increased number of errors on the antisaccade task and had decreased rightward visually guided saccade amplitudes during the predictive tracking task. In Study 2, 13 psychiatric comparison Ss and 32 first-degree biological relatives of the schizophrenia Ss were compared with the schizophrenia Ss and a larger and older sample of nonpsychiatric Ss (n = 33) on the predictive tracking and antisaccade tasks. The groups did not differ on predictive saccadic tracking. The schizophrenia Ss and their first-degree biological relatives made more errors on the antisaccade task than both the nonpsychiatric and psychiatric comparison groups (who did not significantly differ). Results are consistent with the notion that dysfunction of dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, caudate nucleus, or both is related to liability for schizophrenia.
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Abstract
Both animal and human studies suggest that the GABA-benzodiazepine receptor complex may be involved in the acute effects of ethanol, as well as the development of tolerance and dependence with chronic ethanol use. The current study was performed to assess sensitivity to benzodiazepines, and thus the functional sensitivity of the GABA-benzodiazepine receptor system, in subjects at high risk for alcoholism. Sons of alcoholic fathers (SOAs; n = 27) were compared with male controls without a family history of alcoholism (n = 23) in response to diazepam versus placebo. SOAs and controls received four logarithmically increasing doses of intravenous diazepam or placebo in randomized order on 2 days at least 1 week apart. Effects of diazepam were assessed using two eye movement tasks, peak saccadic eye movement velocity, and average smooth pursuit eye movement gain, which provide reliable, quantitative measures of benzodiazepine effects. In addition, memory, self-rated sedation, and pleasurable drug effects were measured. In comparison with control subjects, SOAs displayed significantly less diazepam effects on peak saccade velocity, average smooth pursuit gain, memory, and self-rated sedation, but significantly greater pleasurable drug effects. Differences in response to diazepam between SOAs and male controls may reflect altered functional sensitivity of the central GABA-benzodiazepine receptor system or a more general difference between groups in the effects of CNS active or sedating drugs.
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MESH Headings
- Adult
- Alcoholism/genetics
- Alcoholism/physiopathology
- Arousal/drug effects
- Arousal/genetics
- Arousal/physiology
- Diazepam
- Dose-Response Relationship, Drug
- Humans
- Infusions, Intravenous
- Male
- Memory, Short-Term/drug effects
- Memory, Short-Term/physiology
- Motivation
- Pursuit, Smooth/drug effects
- Pursuit, Smooth/genetics
- Pursuit, Smooth/physiology
- Receptors, GABA-A/drug effects
- Receptors, GABA-A/genetics
- Receptors, GABA-A/physiology
- Risk Factors
- Saccades/drug effects
- Saccades/genetics
- Saccades/physiology
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Abstract
The replications of the finding of eye tracking dysfunction (ETD) in schizophrenia patients and their first-degree relatives suggest that ETD may be informative in studies of a schizophrenia genotype having broadly defined phenotypes. We review and critically assess the literature on ETD with respect to syndrome and familial specificity and discuss the quantitative assessment of eye tracking.
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DNA mutational analysis of type 1 and type 3 Gaucher patients: how well do mutations predict phenotype? Hum Mutat 1994; 3:25-8. [PMID: 8118463 DOI: 10.1002/humu.1380030105] [Citation(s) in RCA: 48] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/28/2023]
Abstract
The wide spectrum of clinical manifestations resulting from glucocerebrosidase deficiency complicates genetic counseling for Gaucher disease. The identification of mutations in the glucocerebrosidase gene has enabled studies of genotype-phenotype correlation. However, a genotypic analysis of 60 type 1 and type 3 Gaucher patients reveals that the 5 most common Gaucher mutations, N370S, L444P, R463C, 84insG, and IVS2 + 1 G-->A, can be found both in patients with and without neurologic manifestations. Moreover, although some generalizations can be made about mutations that are more frequently encountered in particular patient populations, Gaucher patients sharing identical genotypes can exhibit considerable clinical heterogeneity. Thus in considering rationale for population screening one cannot rely solely on PCR determined DNA mutation analysis to reliably predict prognosis in Gaucher disease.
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