Attention-mediated genetic influences on psychotic symptomatology in adolescence

  • Sarah E. Chang
  • , Dylan E. Hughes
  • , Jinhan Zhu
  • , Mahnoor Hyat
  • , Sullivan D. Salone
  • , Zachary T. Goodman
  • , Joshua L. Roffman
  • , Nicole R. Karcher
  • , Leanna M. Hernandez
  • , Jennifer K. Forsyth
  • , Carrie E. Bearden

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

Attention problems are among the earliest precursors of schizophrenia. In this longitudinal cohort study, we examine relationships between cognitive and neuropsychiatric polygenic scores (PGSs), psychosis-spectrum symptoms and attention-related phenotypes in adolescence (ABCD; n = 11,855; mean baseline age 9.93 ± 0.6). Across three biennial visits, greater attentional variability and altered functional connectivity were associated with severity of psychotic-like experiences (PLEs). In European-ancestry youth, neuropsychiatric and cognitive PGSs were associated with greater PLE severity (R2 = 0.026–0.035) and greater attentional variability (R2 = 0.100–0.109). Notably, the effect of broad neurodevelopmental PGS on PLEs weakened over time, whereas schizophrenia PGS did not. Attentional variability partially mediated relationships between multiple PGSs and PLEs, explaining 4–16% of these associations. Finally, PGSs parsed by developmental coexpression modules were significantly associated with PLE severity, though effect sizes were larger for genome-wide PGSs. Findings implicate broad neurodevelopmental liability in the pathophysiology of psychosis-spectrum symptomatology in adolescence; attentional variability may link risk variants to symptoms.

Original languageEnglish
Article number80
Pages (from-to)1518-1531
Number of pages14
JournalNature Mental Health
Volume2
Issue number12
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2024

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