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Dive into the research topics where Henrik Uebel is active.

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Featured researches published by Henrik Uebel.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2006

The analysis of 51 genes in DSM-IV combined type attention deficit hyperactivity disorder : association signals in DRD4, DAT1 and 16 other genes

K Brookes; Xiufeng Xu; Wei J. Chen; Kaixin Zhou; Benjamin M. Neale; Naomi Lowe; R. Aneey; Barbara Franke; Michael Gill; R. Ebstein; Jan K. Buitelaar; Pak Sham; Desmond D. Campbell; Jo Knight; Penny Andreou; Marieke E. Altink; R. Arnold; Frits Boer; Cathelijne J. M. Buschgens; Louise Butler; Hanna Christiansen; L. Feldman; K. Fleischman; Ellen A. Fliers; Raoul Howe-Forbes; A. Goldfarb; Alexander Heise; Isabel Gabriëls; Isabelle Korn-Lubetzki; Rafaela Marco

Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a common neurodevelopmental disorder, starting in early childhood and persisting into adulthood in the majority of cases. Family and twin studies have demonstrated the importance of genetic factors and candidate gene association studies have identified several loci that exert small but significant effects on ADHD. To provide further clarification of reported associations and identify novel associated genes, we examined 1038 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) spanning 51 candidate genes involved in the regulation of neurotransmitter pathways, particularly dopamine, norepinephrine and serotonin pathways, in addition to circadian rhythm genes. Analysis used within family tests of association in a sample of 776 DSM-IV ADHD combined type cases ascertained for the International Multi-centre ADHD Gene project. We found nominal significance with one or more SNPs in 18 genes, including the two most replicated findings in the literature: DRD4 and DAT1. Gene-wide tests, adjusted for the number of SNPs analysed in each gene, identified associations with TPH2, ARRB2, SYP, DAT1, ADRB2, HES1, MAOA and PNMT. Further studies will be needed to confirm or refute the observed associations and their generalisability to other samples.


Neuropsychology (journal) | 2009

Delay and reward choice in ADHD: an experimental test of the role of delay aversion

Rafaela Marco; Ana Miranda; Wolff Schlotz; Amanda Meliá; Aisling Mulligan; Ueli C Müller; Penny Andreou; Louise Butler; Hanna Christiansen; Isabel Gabriëls; S. Medad; Björn Albrecht; Henrik Uebel; P. Asherson; Tobias Banaschewski; Michael Gill; Jonna Kuntsi; Fernando Mulas; Robert D. Oades; Herbert Roeyers; Hans-Christoph Steinhausen; Aribert Rothenberger; Stephen V. Faraone; Edmund Sonuga-Barke

Children with attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) choose smaller sooner (SS) over larger later (LL) rewards more than controls. Here we assess the contributions of impulsive drive for immediate rewards (IDIR) and delay aversion (DAv) to this pattern. We also explore the characteristics of, and the degree of familiality in, ADHD SS responders. We had 360 ADHD probands; 349 siblings and 112 controls (aged between 6 to 17 years) chose between SS (1 point after 2 s) and LL reward (2 points after 30 s) outcomes on the Maudsley Index of Delay Aversion (Kuntsi, Oosterlaan, & Stevenson, 2001): Under one condition SS choice led to less overall trial delay under another it did not. ADHD participants chose SS more than controls under both conditions. This effect was larger when SS choice reduced trial delay. ADHD SS responders were younger, had lower IQ, more conduct disorder and had siblings who were more likely to be SS responders themselves. The results support a dual component model in which both IDIR and DAv contribute to SS choice in ADHD. SS choice may be a marker of an ADHD motivational subtype.


Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders | 2009

Autism symptoms in Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder: A Familial trait which Correlates with Conduct, Oppositional Defiant, Language and Motor Disorders

Aisling Mulligan; Richard Anney; Myra O'Regan; Wai Chen; Louise Butler; Michael Fitzgerald; Jan Buitelaar; Hans-Christoph Steinhausen; Aribert Rothenberger; Ruud B. Minderaa; Judith S. Nijmeijer; Pieter J. Hoekstra; Robert D. Oades; Herbert Roeyers; Cathelijne J. M. Buschgens; Hanna Christiansen; Barbara Franke; Isabel Gabriëls; Catharina A. Hartman; Jonna Kuntsi; Rafaela Marco; Sheera Meidad; Ueli Mueller; Lamprini Psychogiou; Nanda Rommelse; Margaret Thompson; Henrik Uebel; Tobias Banaschewski; R. Ebstein; Jacques Eisenberg

It is hypothesised that autism symptoms are present in Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), are familial and index subtypes of ADHD. Autism symptoms were compared in 821 ADHD probands, 1050 siblings and 149 controls. Shared familiality of autism symptoms and ADHD was calculated using DeFries-Fulker analysis. Autism symptoms were higher in probands than siblings or controls, and higher in male siblings than male controls. Autism symptoms were familial, partly shared with familiality of ADHD in males. Latent class analysis using SCQ-score yielded five classes; Class 1(31%) had few autism symptoms and low comorbidity; Classes 2–4 were intermediate; Class 5(7%) had high autism symptoms and comorbidity. Thus autism symptoms in ADHD represent a familial trait associated with increased neurodevelopmental and oppositional/conduct disorders.


Psychological Medicine | 2007

Reaction time performance in ADHD : improvement under fast-incentive condition and familial effects

Penny Andreou; Benjamin M. Neale; Wai Chen; Hanna Christiansen; Isabel Gabriëls; Alexander Heise; Sheera Meidad; Ueli C Müller; Henrik Uebel; Tobias Banaschewski; Iris Manor; Robert D. Oades; Herbert Roeyers; Aribert Rothenberger; Pak Sham; Hans-Christoph Steinhausen; Philip Asherson; Jonna Kuntsi

BACKGROUND Reaction time (RT) variability is one of the strongest findings to emerge in cognitive-experimental research of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). We set out to confirm the association between ADHD and slow and variable RTs and investigate the degree to which RT performance improves under fast event rate and incentives. Using a group familial correlation approach, we tested the hypothesis that there are shared familial effects on RT performance and ADHD. METHOD A total of 144 ADHD combined-type probands, 125 siblings of the ADHD probands and 60 control participants, ages 6-18, performed a four-choice RT task with baseline and fast-incentive conditions. RESULTS ADHD was associated with slow and variable RTs, and with greater improvement in speed and RT variability from baseline to fast-incentive condition. RT performance showed shared familial influences with ADHD. Under the assumption that the familial effects represent genetic influences, the proportion of the phenotypic correlation due to shared familial influences was estimated as 60-70%. CONCLUSIONS The data are inconsistent with models that consider RT variability as reflecting a stable cognitive deficit in ADHD, but instead emphasize the extent to which energetic or motivational factors can have a greater effect on RT performance in ADHD. The findings support the role of RT variability as an endophenotype mediating the link between genes and ADHD.


Biological Psychiatry | 2008

Action Monitoring in Boys With Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder, Their Nonaffected Siblings, and Normal Control Subjects: Evidence for an Endophenotype

Bjoern Albrecht; Daniel Brandeis; Henrik Uebel; Hartmut Heinrich; Ueli Mueller; Marcus Hasselhorn; Hans-Christoph Steinhausen; Aribert Rothenberger; Tobias Banaschewski

BACKGROUND Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a very common and highly heritable child psychiatric disorder associated with dysfunctions in fronto-striatal networks that control attention and response organization. The aim of this study was to investigate whether features of action monitoring related to dopaminergic functions represent endophenotypes that are brain functions on the pathway from genes and environmental risk factors to behavior. METHODS Action monitoring and error processing as indicated by behavioral and electrophysiological parameters during a flanker task were examined in boys with ADHD combined type according to DSM-IV (n = 68), their nonaffected siblings (n = 18), and healthy control subjects with no known family history of ADHD (n = 22). RESULTS Boys with ADHD displayed slower and more variable reaction-times. Error negativity (Ne) was smaller in boys with ADHD compared with healthy control subjects, whereas nonaffected siblings displayed intermediate amplitudes following a linear model predicted by genetic concordance. The three groups did not differ on error positivity (Pe). The N2 amplitude enhancement due to conflict (incongruent flankers) was reduced in the ADHD group. Nonaffected siblings also displayed intermediate N2 enhancement. CONCLUSIONS Converging evidence from behavioral and event-related potential findings suggests that action monitoring and initial error processing, both related to dopaminergically modulated functions of anterior cingulate cortex, might be an endophenotype related to ADHD.


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 2008

DSM-IV Combined Type ADHD Shows Familial Association With Sibling Trait Scores: A Sampling Strategy For QTL Linkage

Wai Chen; Kaixin Zhou; Pak Sham; Barbara Franke; Jonna Kuntsi; Desmond D. Campbell; K. Fleischman; Jo Knight; Penny Andreou; R. Arnold; Marieke E. Altink; Frits Boer; Mary Jane Boholst; Cathelijne J. M. Buschgens; Louise Butler; Hanna Christiansen; Ellen A. Fliers; Raoul Howe-Forbes; Isabel Gabriëls; Alexander Heise; Isabelle Korn-Lubetzki; Rafaela Marco; She’era Medad; Ruud B. Minderaa; Ueli C Müller; Aisling Mulligan; Lamprini Psychogiou; Nanda Rommelse; Vaheshta Sethna; Henrik Uebel

Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a discrete clinical syndrome characterized by the triad of inattention, hyperactivity, and impulsivity in the context of marked impairments. Molecular genetic studies have been successful in identifying genetic variants associated with ADHD, particularly with DSM‐IV inattentive and combined subtypes. Quantitative trait locus (QTL) approaches to linkage and association mapping have yet to be widely used in ADHD research, although twin studies investigating individual differences suggest that genetic liability for ADHD is continuously distributed throughout the population, underscoring the applicability of quantitative dimensional approaches. To investigate the appropriateness of QTL approaches, we tested the familial association between 894 probands with a research diagnosis of DSM‐IV ADHD combined type and continuous trait measures among 1,135 of their siblings unselected for phenotype. The sibling recurrence rate for ADHD combined subtype was 12.7%, yielding a sibling recurrence risk ratio (λsib) of 9.0. Estimated sibling correlations around 0.2–0.3 are similar to those estimated from the analysis of fraternal twins in population twin samples. We further show that there are no threshold effects on the sibling risk for ADHD among the ADHD probands; and that both affected and unaffected siblings contributed to the association with ADHD trait scores. In conclusion, these data confirm the main requirement for QTL mapping of ADHD by demonstrating that narrowly defined DSM‐IV combined type probands show familial association with dimensional ADHD symptom scores amongst their siblings.


Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry | 2010

Performance variability, impulsivity errors and the impact of incentives as gender-independent endophenotypes for ADHD.

Henrik Uebel; Björn Albrecht; Philip Asherson; Norbert Borger; Louise Butler; Wai Chen; Hanna Christiansen; Alexander Heise; Jonna Kuntsi; Ulrike Schäfer; Penny Andreou; Iris Manor; Rafaela Marco; Ana Miranda; Aisling Mulligan; Robert D. Oades; Jaap J. van der Meere; Stephen V. Faraone; Aribert Rothenberger; Tobias Banaschewski

BACKGROUND Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is one of the most common and highly heritable child psychiatric disorders. There is strong evidence that children with ADHD show slower and more variable responses in tasks such as Go/Nogo tapping aspects of executive functions like sustained attention and response control which may be modulated by motivational factors and/or state-regulation processes. The aim of this study was (1) to determine if these executive functions may constitute an endophenotype for ADHD; (2) to investigate for the first time whether known modulators of these executive functions may also be familial; and (3) to explore whether gender has an impact on these measures. METHODS Two hundred and five children with ADHD combined type, 173 nonaffected biological siblings and 53 controls with no known family history of ADHD were examined using a Go/Nogo task in the framework of a multi-centre study. Performance-measures and modulating effects of event-rate and incentives were examined. Shared familial effects on these measures were assessed, and the influence of gender was tested. RESULTS Children with ADHD responded more slowly and variably than nonaffected siblings or controls. Nonaffected siblings showed intermediate scores for reaction-time variability, false alarms and omission errors under fast and slow event-rates. A slower event-rate did not lead to reduced performance specific to ADHD. In the incentive condition, mean reaction-times speeded up and became less variable only in children with ADHD and their nonaffected siblings, while accuracy was improved in all groups. Males responded faster, but also committed more false alarms. There were no interactions of group by gender. CONCLUSIONS Reaction-time variability and accuracy parameters could be useful neuropsychological endophenotypes for ADHD. Performance-modulating effects of incentives suggested a familially driven motivational dysfunction which may play an important role on etiologic pathways and treatment approaches for ADHD. The effects of gender were independent of familial effects or ADHD-status, which in turn suggests that the proposed endophenotypes are independent of gender.


Archives of General Psychiatry | 2010

Separation of Cognitive Impairments in Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder Into 2 Familial Factors

Jonna Kuntsi; Alexis C. Wood; Fruehling V. Rijsdijk; Katherine A. Johnson; Penelope Andreou; Bjoern Albrecht; Alejandro Arias-Vasquez; Jan Buitelaar; Gráinne McLoughlin; Nanda Rommelse; Joseph A. Sergeant; Edmund Sonuga-Barke; Henrik Uebel; Jaap J. van der Meere; Tobias Banaschewski; Michael Gill; Iris Manor; Ana Miranda; Fernando Mulas; Robert D. Oades; Herbert Roeyers; Aribert Rothenberger; Hans-Christoph Steinhausen; Stephen V. Faraone; Philip Asherson

CONTEXT Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is associated with widespread cognitive impairments, but it is not known whether the apparent multiple impairments share etiological roots or separate etiological pathways exist. A better understanding of the etiological pathways is important for the development of targeted interventions and for identification of suitable intermediate phenotypes for molecular genetic investigations. OBJECTIVES To determine, by using a multivariate familial factor analysis approach, whether 1 or more familial factors underlie the slow and variable reaction times, impaired response inhibition, and choice impulsivity associated with ADHD. DESIGN An ADHD and control sibling-pair design. SETTING Belgium, Germany, Ireland, Israel, Spain, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom. PARTICIPANTS A total of 1265 participants, aged 6 to 18 years: 464 probands with ADHD and 456 of their siblings (524 with combined-subtype ADHD), and 345 control participants. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Performance on a 4-choice reaction time task, a go/no-go inhibition task, and a choice-delay task. RESULTS The final model consisted of 2 familial factors. The larger factor, reflecting 85% of the familial variance of ADHD, captured 98% to 100% of the familial influences on mean reaction time and reaction time variability. The second, smaller factor, reflecting 13% of the familial variance of ADHD, captured 62% to 82% of the familial influences on commission and omission errors on the go/no-go task. Choice impulsivity was excluded in the final model because of poor fit. CONCLUSIONS The findings suggest the existence of 2 familial pathways to cognitive impairments in ADHD and indicate promising cognitive targets for future molecular genetic investigations. The familial distinction between the 2 cognitive impairments is consistent with recent theoretical models--a developmental model and an arousal-attention model--of 2 separable underlying processes in ADHD. Future research that tests the familial model within a developmental framework may inform developmentally sensitive interventions.


Final version in: Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders : devoted to all severe psychopathologies in childhood., 39 (2009) ; no. 2, p. 197-211 / DOI 10.1007/s10803-008-0621-3 | 2011

Autism symptoms in Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder: a familial trait which correlates with conduct, oppositional defiant, language and motor disorders.

Aisling Mulligan; Richard Anney; Myra O’Regan; Louise Butler; Michael Fitzgerald; Jan Buitelaar; Hans-Christoph Steinhausen; Aribert Rothenberger; Ruud B. Minderaa; Judith S. Nijmeijer; Pieter J. Hoekstra; Robert D. Oades; Herbert Roeyers; Cathelijne J. M. Buschgens; Hanna Christiansen; Barbara Franke; Isabel Gabriëls; Catharina A. Hartman; Jonna Kuntsi; Rafaela Marco; Sheera Meidad; Ueli C Müller; Lamprini Psychogiou; Nanda Rommelse; Margaret Thompson; Henrik Uebel; Tobias Banaschewski; Richard P. Ebstein; Jacques Eisenberg; Iris Manor

It is hypothesised that autism symptoms are present in Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), are familial and index subtypes of ADHD. Autism symptoms were compared in 821 ADHD probands, 1050 siblings and 149 controls. Shared familiality of autism symptoms and ADHD was calculated using DeFries-Fulker analysis. Autism symptoms were higher in probands than siblings or controls, and higher in male siblings than male controls. Autism symptoms were familial, partly shared with familiality of ADHD in males. Latent class analysis using SCQ-score yielded five classes; Class 1(31%) had few autism symptoms and low comorbidity; Classes 2–4 were intermediate; Class 5(7%) had high autism symptoms and comorbidity. Thus autism symptoms in ADHD represent a familial trait associated with increased neurodevelopmental and oppositional/conduct disorders.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2008

A high-density SNP linkage scan with 142 combined subtype ADHD sib pairs identifies linkage regions on chromosomes 9 and 16

P. Asherson; Kaixin Zhou; Richard Anney; Barbara Franke; Jan K. Buitelaar; R. Ebstein; Michael Gill; Marieke E. Altink; R. Arnold; Frits Boer; K Brookes; Cathelijne J. M. Buschgens; Louise Butler; D. Cambell; Wei J. Chen; Hanna Christiansen; L. Feldman; K. Fleischman; Ellen A. Fliers; Raoul Howe-Forbes; A. Goldfarb; Alexander Heise; Isabel Gabriëls; L. Johansson; I. Lubetzki; Rafaela Marco; S. Medad; Ruud B. Minderaa; Fernando Mulas; Ueli C Müller

As part of the International Multi-centre ADHD Genetics project we completed an affected sibling pair study of 142 narrowly defined Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, fourth edition combined type attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) proband–sibling pairs. No linkage was observed on the most established ADHD-linked genomic regions of 5p and 17p. We found suggestive linkage signals on chromosomes 9 and 16, respectively, with the highest multipoint nonparametric linkage signal on chromosome 16q23 at 99 cM (log of the odds, LOD=3.1) overlapping data published from the previous UCLA (University of California, Los Angeles) (LOD>1, ∼95 cM) and Dutch (LOD>1, ∼100 cM) studies. The second highest peak in this study was on chromosome 9q22 at 90 cM (LOD=2.13); both the previous UCLA and German studies also found some evidence of linkage at almost the same location (UCLA LOD=1.45 at 93 cM; German LOD=0.68 at 100 cM). The overlap of these two main peaks with previous findings suggests that loci linked to ADHD may lie within these regions. Meta-analysis or reanalysis of the raw data of all the available ADHD linkage scan data may help to clarify whether these represent true linked loci.

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Hanna Christiansen

University of Duisburg-Essen

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Robert D. Oades

University of Duisburg-Essen

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Barbara Franke

Radboud University Nijmegen

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