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An evolutionary perspective on complex neuropsychiatric disease.
- McClellan, Jon;
- Zoghbi, Anthony;
- Buxbaum, Joseph;
- Cappi, Carolina;
- Crowley, James;
- Flint, Jonathan Frederic Rest;
- Grice, Dorothy;
- Gulsuner, Suleyman;
- Iyegbe, Conrad;
- Jain, Sanjeev;
- Kuo, Po-Hsiu;
- Lattig, Maria;
- Passos-Bueno, Maria;
- Purushottam, Meera;
- Stein, Dan;
- Sunshine, Anna;
- Susser, Ezra;
- Walsh, Christopher;
- Wootton, Olivia;
- King, Mary-Claire
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2023.10.037Abstract
The forces of evolution-mutation, selection, migration, and genetic drift-shape the genetic architecture of human traits, including the genetic architecture of complex neuropsychiatric illnesses. Studying these illnesses in populations that are diverse in genetic ancestry, historical demography, and cultural history can reveal how evolutionary forces have guided adaptation over time and place. A fundamental truth of shared human biology is that an allele responsible for a disease in anyone, anywhere, reveals a gene critical to the normal biology underlying that condition in everyone, everywhere. Understanding the genetic causes of neuropsychiatric disease in the widest possible range of human populations thus yields the greatest possible range of insight into genes critical to human brain development. In this perspective, we explore some of the relationships between genes, adaptation, and history that can be illuminated by an evolutionary perspective on studies of complex neuropsychiatric disease in diverse populations.
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