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Striatal response to reward anticipation: evidence for a systems-level intermediate phenotype for schizophrenia.

Authors :
Grimm O
Heinz A
Walter H
Kirsch P
Erk S
Haddad L
Plichta MM
Romanczuk-Seiferth N
Pöhland L
Mohnke S
Mühleisen TW
Mattheisen M
Witt SH
Schäfer A
Cichon S
Nöthen M
Rietschel M
Tost H
Meyer-Lindenberg A
Source :
JAMA psychiatry [JAMA Psychiatry] 2014 May; Vol. 71 (5), pp. 531-9.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Importance: Attenuated ventral striatal response during reward anticipation is a core feature of schizophrenia that is seen in prodromal, drug-naive, and chronic schizophrenic patients. Schizophrenia is highly heritable, raising the possibility that this phenotype is related to the genetic risk for the disorder.<br />Objective: To examine a large sample of healthy first-degree relatives of schizophrenic patients and compare their neural responses to reward anticipation with those of carefully matched controls without a family psychiatric history. To further support the utility of this phenotype, we studied its test-retest reliability, its potential brain structural contributions, and the effects of a protective missense variant in neuregulin 1 (NRG1) linked to schizophrenia by meta-analysis (ie, rs10503929).<br />Design, Setting, and Participants: Examination of a well-established monetary reward anticipation paradigm during functional magnetic resonance imaging at a university hospital; voxel-based morphometry; test-retest reliability analysis of striatal activations in an independent sample of 25 healthy participants scanned twice with the same task; and imaging genetics analysis of the control group. A total of 54 healthy first-degree relatives of schizophrenic patients and 80 controls matched for demographic, psychological, clinical, and task performance characteristics were studied.<br />Main Outcomes and Measures: Blood oxygen level-dependent response during reward anticipation, analysis of intraclass correlations of functional contrasts, and associations between striatal gray matter volume and NRG1 genotype.<br />Results: Compared with controls, healthy first-degree relatives showed a highly significant decrease in ventral striatal activation during reward anticipation (familywise error-corrected P < .03 for multiple comparisons across the whole brain). Supplemental analyses confirmed that the identified systems-level functional phenotype is reliable (with intraclass correlation coefficients of 0.59-0.73), independent of local gray matter volume (with no corresponding group differences and no correlation to function, and with all uncorrected P values >.05), and affected by the NRG1 genotype (higher striatal responses in controls with the protective rs10503929 C allele; familywise error-corrected P < .03 for ventral striatal response).<br />Conclusions and Relevance: Healthy first-degree relatives of schizophrenic patients show altered striatal activation during reward anticipation in a directionality and localization consistent with prior patient findings. This provides evidence for a functional neural system mechanism related to familial risk. The phenotype can be assessed reliably, is independent of alterations in striatal structure, and is influenced by a schizophrenia candidate gene variant in NRG1. These data encourage us to further investigate the genetic and molecular contributions to this phenotype.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2168-6238
Volume :
71
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
JAMA psychiatry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
24622944
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2014.9