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Dive into the research topics where Milan Dragovic is active.

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Featured researches published by Milan Dragovic.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2005

Genetic Evidence for a Distinct Subtype of Schizophrenia Characterized by Pervasive Cognitive Deficit

Joachim Hallmayer; Luba Kalaydjieva; Johanna C. Badcock; Milan Dragovic; Sarah Howell; Patricia T. Michie; Daniel Rock; David Vile; Rachael Williams; Elizabeth H. Corder; Kate Hollingsworth; Assen Jablensky

A novel phenotyping strategy in schizophrenia, targeting different neurocognitive domains, neurobehavioral features, and selected personality traits, has allowed us to identify a homogeneous familial subtype of the disease, characterized by pervasive neurocognitive deficit. Our genome scan data indicate that this subtype, which accounts for up to 50% of our sample, has a distinct genetic basis and explains linkage to chromosome 6p24 reported previously. If representative of other populations, the ratio of schizophrenia subtypes observed in our families could have a profound impact on sample heterogeneity and on the power of genetic studies to detect linkage and association. Our proposed abbreviated battery of tests should facilitate phenotype characterization for future genetic analyses and allow a focus on a crisply defined schizophrenia subtype, thus promoting a more informed search for susceptibility genes.


Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica | 2005

Handedness in schizophrenia: a quantitative review of evidence

Milan Dragovic; Geoff Hammond

Objective:  The prevalence of various anomalous handedness subtypes in schizophrenia patients remains ambiguous. Although current literature favours the notion that the shift in lateral preferences seen is because of an increase of mixed‐handedness, several studies suggest that exclusive left handedness is more prevalent than in the general population.


Archives of General Psychiatry | 2010

Psychosis susceptibility gene ZNF804A and cognitive performance in schizophrenia.

James Tynan Rhys Walters; Aiden Corvin; Michael John Owen; Hywel Williams; Milan Dragovic; Emma M. Quinn; Róisín Judge; Daniel J. Smith; Nadine Norton; Ina Giegling; Annette M. Hartmann; Hans Jürgen Möller; Pierandrea Muglia; Valentina Moskvina; Sarah Dwyer; Therese O'Donoghue; Bharti Morar; Matthew N. Cooper; David Chandler; Assen Jablensky; Michael Gill; Luba Kaladjieva; Derek W. Morris; Michael Conlon O'Donovan; Dan Rujescu; Gary Donohoe

CONTEXT The Zinc Finger Protein 804A gene (ZNF804A) has been implicated in schizophrenia susceptibility by several genome-wide association studies. ZNF804A is brain expressed but of unknown function. OBJECTIVE To investigate whether the identified risk allele at the disease-associated single nucleotide polymorphism rs1344706 is associated with variation in neuropsychological performance in patients and controls. DESIGN Comparison of cases and controls grouped according to ZNF804A genotype (AA vs AC vs CC) on selected measures of cognition in 2 independent samples. SETTING Unrelated patients from general adult psychiatric inpatient and outpatient services and unrelated healthy participants from the general population were ascertained. PARTICIPANTS Patients with DSM-IV-diagnosed schizophrenia and healthy participants from independent samples of Irish (297 cases and 165 controls) and German (251 cases and 1472 controls) nationality. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES In this 2-stage study, we tested for an association between ZNF804A rs1344706 and cognitive functions known to be impaired in schizophrenia (IQ, episodic memory, working memory, and attention) in an Irish discovery sample. We then tested significant results in a German replication sample. RESULTS In the Irish samples, the ZNF804A genotype was associated with differences in episodic and working memory in patients but not in controls. These findings replicated in the same direction in the German samples. Furthermore, in both samples, when patients with a lower IQ were excluded, the association between ZNF804A and schizophrenia strengthened. CONCLUSIONS In a disorder characterized by heterogeneity, a risk variant at ZNF804A seems to delineate a patient subgroup characterized by relatively spared cognitive ability. Further work is required to establish whether this represents a discrete molecular pathogenesis that differs from that of other patient groups and whether this also has consequences for nosologic classification, illness course, or treatment.


Laterality | 2004

Towards an improved measure of the Edinburgh Handedness Inventory: a one-factor congeneric measurement model using confirmatory factor analysis.

Milan Dragovic

The Edinburgh Handedness Inventory was administered to a sample of 203 mentally well adults drawn from the Western Australian Family Study of Schizophrenia (90 men and 113 woman). Confirmatory factor analysis demonstrated that seven out of ten original items of the Edinburgh Handedness Inventory were sufficient to provide an internally consistent and valid measure of hand preference. Exclusion of three problematic items led to a more refined measurement of the latent construct of handedness. The rationale for exclusion was: (1) redundancy stemming from collinearity between writing and drawing, and (2) an unacceptably large measurement error associated with two of the items (use of broom and opening a box‐lid). The results suggest that this revision of the Edinburgh Handedness Inventory enhances its measurement properties.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2013

Genome-wide supported variant MIR137 and severe negative symptoms predict membership of an impaired cognitive subtype of schizophrenia

Melissa J. Green; Murray J. Cairns; Jin Qin Wu; Milan Dragovic; Assen Jablensky; Paul A. Tooney; Rodney J. Scott; Vaughan J. Carr

Progress in determining the aetiology of schizophrenia (Sz) has arguably been limited by a poorly defined phenotype. We sought to delineate empirically derived cognitive subtypes of Sz to investigate the association of a genetic variant identified in a recent genome-wide association study with specific phenotypic characteristics of Sz. We applied Grade of Membership (GoM) analyses to 617 patients meeting ICD-10 criteria for Sz (n=526) or schizoaffective disorder (n=91), using cognitive performance indicators collected within the Australian Schizophrenia Research Bank. Cognitive variables included subscales from the Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of Neuropsychological Status, the Controlled Oral Word Association Test and the Letter Number Sequencing Test, and standardised estimates of premorbid and current intelligence quotient. The most parsimonious GoM solution yielded two subtypes of clinical cases reflecting those with cognitive deficits (CDs; N=294), comprising 47.6% of the sample who were impaired across all cognitive measures, and a cognitively spared group (CS; N=323) made up of the remaining 52.4% who performed relatively well on all cognitive tests. The CD subgroup were more likely to be unemployed, had an earlier illness onset, and greater severity of functional disability and negative symptoms than the CS group. Risk alleles on the MIR137 single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) predicted membership of CD subtype only in combination with higher severity of negative symptoms. These findings provide the first evidence for association of the MIR137 SNP with a specific Sz phenotype characterised by severe CDs and negative symptoms, consistent with the emerging role of microRNAs in the regulation of proteins responsible for neural development and function.


Acta Neuropsychiatrica | 2004

Categorization and validation of handedness using latent class analysis

Milan Dragovic

Background: A view that handedness is not a dichotomous, i.e. left–right, phenomenon is shared by majority of researchers. However, there are different opinions about the exact number of hand-preference categories and criteria that should be used for their classification. Objectives: This study examined hand-preference categories using the latent class analysis (LCA) and validated them against two external criteria (i.e. hand demonstration test and a series of arbitrary cut-off points). Method: The Edinburgh Handedness Inventory was applied to 354 individuals randomly selected from the general population, and the obtained data were analysed using the LatentGOLD software. Results: Three discrete hand-preference clusters were identified, i.e. left-, right- and mixed-handed category. Further subdivision of hand-preference clusters resulted in a non-parsimonious subcategorization of individuals. There was a good agreement between the LCA-based classification and classification based on hand-preference demonstration tests. The highest agreement between the LCA model and the different types of arbitrary classification criteria ranged between 0 ± 50 and 0 ± 70 of the laterality quotient. Conclusions: The study findings supported the view that handedness is not a bimodal phenomenon. However, definitions and subcategorizations of mixed-handedness using the cut-off points that are outside of the recommended range may lead to misclassification of cases. It is hoped that the categorization and validation of handedness developed in the context of this study will make future research in this area less dependent on arbitrary values and criteria.


Schizophrenia Bulletin | 2013

Age at Initiation of Cannabis Use Predicts Age at Onset of Psychosis: The 7- to 8-Year Trend

Nikos C. Stefanis; Milan Dragovic; Brian D. Power; Assen Jablensky; David Castle; Vera A. Morgan

We investigated the existence of a temporal association between age at initiation of cannabis use and age at onset of psychotic illness in 997 participants from the 2010 Survey of High Impact Psychosis (SHIP) in Australia. We tested for group differences in age at onset of psychotic illness and in the duration of premorbid exposure to cannabis (DPEC). Analyses were repeated in subgroups of participants with a schizophrenia-spectrum disorder (SSD), a diagnosis of lifetime cannabis dependence (LCD), and a comorbid SSD/LCD diagnosis. The association between age at initiation of cannabis use and age at onset of psychotic illness was linear and significant, F(11, 984) = 13.77, P < .001, even after adjusting for confounders. The effect of age at initiation of cannabis use on DPEC was not significant (mean duration of 7.8 years), and this effect was similar in participants with a SSD, LCD, and comorbid SSD/ LCD diagnosis although a shift toward shorter premorbid exposure to cannabis was noted in the SSD/LCD subgroup (mean duration of 7.19 years for SSD/LCD). A temporal direct relationship between age at initiation of cannabis use and age at onset of psychotic illness was detected with a premorbid exposure to cannabis trend of 7-8 years, modifiable by higher severity of premorbid cannabis use and a diagnosis of SSD. Cannabis may exert a cumulative toxic effect on individuals on the pathway to developing psychosis, the manifestation of which is delayed for approximately 7-8 years, regardless of age at which cannabis use was initiated.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2011

Neuregulin 3 (NRG3) as a susceptibility gene in a schizophrenia subtype with florid delusions and relatively spared cognition.

Bharti Morar; Milan Dragovic; Flavie Waters; David Chandler; Luba Kalaydjieva; Assen Jablensky

Linkage of 10q22-q23 to schizophrenia and the recently reported association of Neuregulin 3 (NRG3) polymorphisms with high ‘delusion factor’ scores led us to attempt replication and further refinement of these findings in a sample of 411 schizophrenic patients and 223 nonpsychiatric control subjects. Using quantitative cognitive traits, patients were grouped into a cluster with pervasive cognitive deficit (CD) and a cluster with relatively spared cognition (CS). We found a significant association between rs6584400 and schizophrenia, with a trend for rs10883866. Post hoc analysis revealed that this result was mainly due to the CS cluster, characterized by elevated scores on Schneiderian first-rank symptoms, salience of complex delusions and positive thought disorder—thus closely related to the ‘delusion factor’. In addition, both rs6584400 and rs10883866 were associated with the degraded-stimulus continuous performance task in which ‘risk’ alleles were associated with better than average performance in patients and worse performance in controls. This suggests that NRG3 may be modulating early attentional processes for perceptual sensitivity and vigilance, with opposite effects in affected individuals and healthy controls. The two single-nucleotide polymorphisms are in close proximity to the alternative first exons of the NRG3-a, -b and -d isoforms, of which the human brain-specific NRG-b appears to be the most interesting candidate.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2003

Linkage analysis of candidate regions using a composite neurocognitive phenotype correlated with schizophrenia

Joachim Hallmayer; Assen Jablensky; Patricia T. Michie; Max A. Woodbury; Boyd Salmon; Johann Combrinck; H-Erich Wichmann; Daniel Rock; M. D'Ercole; Sarah Howell; Milan Dragovic; Aaron R. Kent

As schizophrenia is genetically and clinically heterogeneous, systematic investigations are required to determine whether ICD-10 or DSM-IV categorical diagnoses identify a phenotype suitable and sufficient for genetic research, or whether correlated phenotypes incorporating neurocognitive performance and personality traits provide a phenotypic characterisation that accounts better for the underlying variation. We utilised a grade of membership (GoM) model (a mathematical typology developed for studies of complex biological systems) to integrate multiple cognitive and personality measurements into a limited number of composite graded traits (latent pure types) in a sample of 61 nuclear families comprising 80 subjects with ICD-10/DSM-IV schizophrenia or schizophrenia spectrum disorders and 138 nonpsychotic first-degree relatives. GoM probability scores, computed for all subjects, allowed individuals to be partly assigned to more than one pure type. Two distinct and contrasting neurocognitive phenotypes, one familial, associated with paranoid schizophrenia, and one sporadic, associated with nonparanoid schizophrenia, accounted for 74% of the affected subjects. Combining clinical diagnosis with GoM scores to stratify the entire sample into liability classes, and using variance component analysis (SOLAR), in addition to parametric and nonparametric multipoint linkage analysis, we explored candidate regions on chromosomes 6, 10 and 22. The results indicated suggestive linkage for the familial neurocognitive phenotype (multipoint MLS 2.6 under a low-penetrance model and MLS>3.0 under a high-penetrance model) to a 14 cM area on chromosome 6, including the entire HLA region. Results for chromosomes 10 and 22 were negative. The findings suggest that the familial neurocognitive phenotype may be a pleiotropic expression of genes underlying the susceptibility to paranoid schizophrenia. We conclude that use of composite neurocognitive and personality trait measurements as correlated phenotypes supplementing clinical diagnosis can help stratify the liability to schizophrenia across all members of families prior to linkage, allow the search for susceptibility genes to focus selectively on subsets of families at high genetic risk, and augment considerably the power of genetic analysis.


Genes, Brain and Behavior | 2011

Polymorphisms associated with normal memory variation also affect memory impairment in schizophrenia

Assen Jablensky; Bharti Morar; Steve Wiltshire; Kim W. Carter; Milan Dragovic; Johanna C. Badcock; David Chandler; Kirsten E. Peters; Luba Kalaydjieva

Neurocognitive dysfunction is a core feature of schizophrenia with particularly prominent deficits in verbal episodic memory. The molecular basis of this memory impairment is poorly understood and its relatedness to normal variation in memory performance is unclear. In this study, we explore, in a sample of cognitively impaired schizophrenia patients, the role of polymorphisms in seven genes recently reported to modulate episodic memory in normal subjects. Three polymorphisms (GRIN2B rs220599, GRM3 rs2189814 and PRKCA rs8074995) were associated with episodic verbal memory in both control and patients with cognitive deficit, but not in cognitively spared patients or the pooled schizophrenia sample. GRM3 and PRKCA acted in opposite directions in patients compared to controls, possibly reflecting an abnormal brain milieu and/or adverse environmental effects in schizophrenia. The encoded proteins balance glutamate signalling vs. excitotoxicity in complex interactions involving the excitatory amino acid transporter 2 (EAAT2), implicated in the dysfunctional glutamatergic signalling in schizophrenia. Double carrier status of the GRM3 and PRKCA minor alleles was associated with lower memory test scores and with increased risk of schizophrenia. Single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) rs8074995 lies within the PRKCA region spanned by a rare haplotype associated with schizophrenia in a recent UK study and provides further evidence of PRKCA contribution to memory impairment and susceptibility to schizophrenia. Our study supports the utility of parsing the broad phenotype of schizophrenia into component cognitive endophenotypes that reduce heterogeneity and enable the capture of potentially important genetic associations.

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Assen Jablensky

University of Western Australia

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Johanna C. Badcock

University of Western Australia

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Flavie Waters

University of Western Australia

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Daniel Rock

University of Western Australia

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David Chandler

University of Western Australia

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Brian D. Power

University of Western Australia

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Bharti Morar

University of Western Australia

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Geoff Hammond

University of Western Australia

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