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Psychiatric disorders affect 29% of the global population at least once in the lifespan, and genetic studies have proved a shared genetic basis among them, although the underlying molecular mechanisms remain largely unknown. DNA methylation plays an important role in complex disorders and, remarkably, enrichment of common genetic variants influencing allele-specific methylation (ASM) has been reported among variants associated with specific psychiatric disorders. In the present study we assessed the contribution of ASM to a set of eight psychiatric disorders by combining genetic, epigenetic and expression data. We interrogated a list of 3896 ASM tagSNPs in the brain in the summary statistics of a cross-disorder GWAS meta-analysis of eight psychiatric disorders from the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium, including more than 162,000 cases and 276,000 controls. We identified 80 SNPs with pleiotropic effects on psychiatric disorders that show an opposite directional effect on methylation and gene expression. These SNPs converge on eight candidate genes: ZSCAN29, ZSCAN31, BTN3A2, DDAH2, HAPLN4, ARTN, FAM109B and NAGA. ZSCAN29 shows the broadest pleiotropic effects, showing associations with five out of eight psychiatric disorders considered, followed by ZSCAN31 and BTN3A2, associated with three disorders. All these genes overlap with CNVs related to cognitive phenotypes and psychiatric traits, they are expressed in the brain, and seven of them have previously been associated with specific psychiatric disorders, supporting our results. To sum up, our integrative functional genomics analysis identified eight psychiatric disease risk genes that impact a broad list of disorders and highlight an etiologic role of SNPs that influence DNA methylation and gene expression in the brain.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pnpbp.2021.110454 | DOI Listing |
JMIR Res Protoc
September 2025
Institute of Higher Education and Research in Healthcare, Faculty of Biology and Medicine, University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Background: In pediatric intensive care units, pain, sedation, delirium, and iatrogenic withdrawal syndrome (IWS) must be managed as interrelated conditions. Although clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) exist, new evidence needs to be incorporated, gaps in recommendations addressed, and recommendations adapted to the European context.
Objective: This protocol describes the development of the first patient- and family-informed European guideline for managing pain, sedation, delirium, and IWS by the European Society of Paediatric and Neonatal Intensive Care.
Theor Med Bioeth
September 2025
Laboratory of Applied Epistemology, DADU, University of Sassari, Palazzo del Pou Salit, Piazza Duomo 6, 07041, Alghero, Sassari, Italy.
Orthorexia nervosa is defined as an exaggerated and obsessive fixation on healthy eating. In recent years, there has been growing debate over whether orthorexia nervosa should be considered a new psychiatric disorder. This paper discusses the conceptual issues that emerge from the attempt to identify the diagnostic criteria for orthorexia nervosa as opposed to non-pathological cases of healthy eating or 'healthy orthorexia'.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Auton Res
September 2025
Faculty of Medicine, Department of Medicine, Ageing and Age-Associated Disorders Research Group, Division of Geriatric Medicine, University of Malaya, 50603, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
Background: Orthostatic hypotension (OH) is prevalent in older adults and is often associated with falls. However, the presence or absence of symptoms in OH may be mediated by cerebral autoregulation, which helps maintain cerebral perfusion during blood pressure fluctuations.
Methods: We recruited 40 older adults (aged ≥ 55 years) from the Malaysian Elders Longitudinal Research (MELoR) cohort.
Eur J Neurol
September 2025
Neuroimaging Research Unit, Division of Neuroscience, IRCCS San Raffaele Scientific Institute, Milan, Italy.
Background: Frontotemporal dementia (FTD) encompasses diverse clinical phenotypes, primarily characterized by behavioral and/or language dysfunction. A newly characterized variant, semantic behavioral variant FTD (sbvFTD), exhibits predominant right temporal atrophy with features bridging behavioral variant FTD (bvFTD) and semantic variant primary progressive aphasia (svPPA). This study investigates the longitudinal structural MRI correlates of these FTD variants, focusing on cortical and subcortical structural damage to aid differential diagnosis and prognosis.
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