更旧的父亲更有可能有精神分裂症的孩子

纽约 - 4月9日,2001--大龄父亲更可能有精神分裂症的儿童,在医生及外科医生研究者哥伦比亚大学领导的一项研究发现。这一发现扩展越来越多的证据机构,大龄父亲更可能有多种基因影响的疾病的儿童。推进了多达四分之一的精神分裂症病例的父亲年龄账户,多洛雷斯马拉斯皮纳,医学博士,该研究的主要作者。马拉斯皮纳博士是医生及外科医生的哥伦比亚大学临床精神病学副教授和临床神经生物学实验室主任在纽约州精神病研究所的医学遗传学分部。这一发现补充其他研究显示“一个人都有一个生物钟,太,”马拉斯皮纳博士说。“男人应该知道,当他们做他们的家庭计划的风险。”该研究支持的假设,作为父亲的年龄,精子细胞可以积累传递给后代的突变,称该研究的作者。该研究结果发表在普通精神病学杂志档案的4月问题。开发精神分裂症的儿童的风险显着,稳步上升为父亲增加年龄,根据这项研究,会同纽约大学医学院和卫生以色列外交部进行。调查结果表明,45至49岁之间的男性的两倍,可能比那些25岁以下的有与破坏性精神疾病的儿童。 Men aged 50 or older, furthermore, appear to be at three times that risk. Schizophrenia is believed to result from an as-yet poorly understood mix of genetic and environmental factors. Several genes may be involved. The new findings don’t identify the genetic culprits but do help explain several longstanding mysteries about schizophrenia’s epidemiology. First, the illness is remarkably persistent in human populations over time. This is a puzzle because individuals with schizophrenia are less likely to mate and reproduce, presumably because of the social deficits in the illness, so evolution would normally tend to decrease the proportion of individuals with the disease, unless new cases kept arising through new mutations. A related fact is that schizophrenia’s incidence is strikingly consistent across human populations – about one percent of individuals in every population have schizophrenia. If environmental factors accounted for most of the disease the incidence would vary in different areas. The new findings may help explain both puzzles by showing how, in each generation, new genetic mutations replenish the genes for schizophrenia and keep the incidence stable across populations. This may also explain why a growing number of genetic diseases are being linked to advancing parental age. As men age, their sperm continue to reproduce through division. Each successive division introduces a slight risk of error in the genetic material of the new sperm, which is passed on to the children. In women, by contrast, almost all of the divisions in eggs occur before their birth and the eggs don’t continue to divide as they age. “I would guess that our study is just the tip of the iceberg,” said Susan Harlap, M.D., research professor of epidemiology in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at New York University School of Medicine and an author of the new study. “Eventually it would seem that the father’s sperm is going to turn out to be just as important as the mother's egg." Women’s eggs may also develop chromosomal abnormalities, but these typically involve larger chromosomal changes and thus are easier to catch through genetic tests. Sperm mutations are so-called “single-point” mutations, which are tiny and almost impossible to catch without knowing in advance what mutations to look for. The new study marks the first time advancing paternal age has been linked to a psychiatric rather than a physical illness, Dr. Malaspina said. Conditions previously linked to advancing paternal age include prostate cancer, nervous system cancer, neurofibromatosis (fleshy growths of abnormal nerve tissue), the most common type of dwarfism, Apert syndrome (malformation of the skulls, hands and feet), and Marfan syndrome, which involves defects of the eyes, bones, heart and blood vessels. The schizophrenia study was conducted by reviewing the records of 87,907 people born in Jerusalem between 1964 and 1976 and linking the records to those of the Israel Psychiatric Registry within the Israeli Ministry of Health. Interestingly, Dr. Malaspina added, the study also found that the risk of schizophrenia decreases somewhat as the length of the parents’ marriage increases. This correlation works opposite to, but doesn’t cancel the effect of, advancing paternal age, Dr. Malaspina said. Dr. Malaspina added that the new findings on paternal age should help redirect research strategies for identifying schizophrenia’s causes. First, researchers may want to focus less on independent environmental causes, she explained. These factors are still important, but researchers should probably focus on gene-environment interactions rather than the environment as a sole culprit, she said. Second, researchers can focus on identifying gene modifications in cases of advanced paternal age, she continued. Columbia researchers are beginning this work, starting with mice. “We’re going to look for changes in gene expression (activation) in mice with older parents.” The study was funded by the National Institute of Mental Health and the G. Harold and Leila Y. Mathers Foundation.

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标签

Dolores Malaspina,以色列精神病学注册机构,Mathers Foundation,医疗遗传学部门,医师外科医生,Susan Harlap