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Dive into the research topics where Patrizia Baldwin is active.

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Featured researches published by Patrizia Baldwin.


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 2007

Evidence for association and epistasis at the DAOA/G30 and D-amino acid oxidase loci in an Irish schizophrenia sample.

Aiden Corvin; Kevin A. McGhee; Kevin Murphy; Gary Donohoe; Jeanne-Marie Nangle; Siobhan Schwaiger; Niamh Kenny; Sarah Clarke; David Meagher; John P. Quinn; Paul Scully; Patrizia Baldwin; David Browne; Cathal Walsh; John L. Waddington; Derek W. Morris; Michael Gill

The D‐amino acid oxidase (DAO) signaling pathway has been implicated in schizophrenia pathogenesis. This may be mediated through modulation of NMDA function by DAO, which is in turn activated by DAO activator (DAOA, formerly G72). Chumakov et al. ( 2002 ); PNAS 99: 13675–13680, identifying the novel schizophrenia susceptibility gene DAOA/G30 and a number of independent studies have since reported evidence of association between the DAOA and DAO genes and schizophrenia. However, at least two studies have failed to replicate the epistatic interaction between these loci described in the original report and there have been differences in the associated alleles/haplotypes reported at each locus. In this study, we performed association and epistasis analyses of the DAOA/G30 and DAO loci in a sample of 373 cases with DSM‐IV schizophrenia/schizoaffective disorder and 812 controls from the Republic of Ireland. Corrected for the number of tests performed, we found evidence for association between markers at both genes and schizophrenia: DAOA/G30 (P = 0.005, OR = 1.34 (1.09, 1.65)) and DAO (P = 0.003, OR = 1.43 (1.12, 1.84). The data suggest that evidence for association at DAO (marker rs2111902) is more consistent than previously realized, particularly in Caucasian schizophrenia populations. We identified evidence for epistatic interaction between the associated SNPs at DAOA and DAO genes in contributing to schizophrenia risk (OR = 9.3 (1.4, 60.5). Based on these data, more systematic investigation of genes involved in DAO signaling is required.


Biological Psychiatry | 2008

Dysbindin (DTNBP1) and the Biogenesis of Lysosome-Related Organelles Complex 1 (BLOC-1): Main and Epistatic Gene Effects Are Potential Contributors to Schizophrenia Susceptibility

Derek W. Morris; Kevin Murphy; Niamh Kenny; Shaun Purcell; Kevin A. McGhee; Siobhan Schwaiger; Jeanne-Marie Nangle; Gary Donohoe; Sarah Clarke; Paul Scully; John P. Quinn; David Meagher; Patrizia Baldwin; Niall Crumlish; Eadbhard O’Callaghan; John L. Waddington; Michael Gill; Aiden Corvin

BACKGROUND The DTNBP1 gene, encoding dysbindin, has been strongly implicated in schizophrenia (SZ) susceptibility by a series of independent genetic association and gene expression studies. Among its known functions, dysbindin is part of a protein complex, termed the biogenesis of lysosome-related organelles complex 1 (BLOC-1), the molecular components of which might be involved in the regulation of vesicular trafficking and dendrite branching. METHODS A systematic investigation of the other seven BLOC-1 genes (MUTED, PLDN, CNO, SNAPAP, BLOC1S1, BLOC1S2, and BLOC1S3) for evidence of association with SZ was undertaken in a sample of 373 SZ cases and 812 control subjects. Possible epistasis between combinations of BLOC-1 genes, including DTNBP1, was tested with a novel method of investigating for gene-gene interaction. Quality control measures were incorporated into genotyping strategy, and all results were corrected for multiple testing to prevent false positive results. RESULTS We identified significant evidence of association between BLOC1S3 and SZ (odds ratio = 1.45, confidence interval = 1.13-1.86, p = .0028, corrected p = .0389). We also report evidence for epistatic interaction between DTNBP1 and MUTED contributing to SZ in the absence of a significant main effect at MUTED (p = .0009, corrected p = .0252). Single marker and epistasis results remained significant after correction for multiple testing. CONCLUSIONS Together these data provide evidence for the involvement of the BLOC-1 protein complex in SZ pathogenesis.


Biological Psychiatry | 2007

Three-dimensional laser surface imaging and geometric morphometrics resolve frontonasal dysmorphology in schizophrenia.

Robin J. Hennessy; Patrizia Baldwin; David Browne; Anthony Kinsella; John L. Waddington

BACKGROUND Although a role for early developmental disturbance(s) in schizophrenia is postulated, it has proved difficult to identify hard, biological evidence. The brain and face emerge in embryologic intimacy, such that in neurodevelopmental disorders, brain dysmorphogenesis is accompanied by facial dysmorphogenesis. METHODS Three-dimensional (3D) laser surface imaging was used to capture the facial surface of patients and control subjects in 37 male and 32 female patients who satisfied DSM-IV criteria for schizophrenia in comparison with 58 male and 34 female control subjects. Surface images were analyzed using geometric morphometrics and 3D visualizations to identify domains of facial shape that distinguish patients from control subjects. RESULTS Both male and, particularly, female patients evidenced significant facial dysmorphology. There was narrowing and reduction of the mid to lower face and frontonasal prominences, including reduced width and posterior displacement of the mouth, lips, and chin; increased width of the upper face, mandible, and skull base, with lateral displacement of the cheeks, eyes, and orbits; and anterior displacement of the superior margins of the orbits. CONCLUSIONS The frontonasal prominence, which enjoys the most intimate embryologic relationship with the anterior brain and also orchestrates aspects of development in maxillary and mandibular domains, evidences a characteristic topography of dysmorphogenesis in schizophrenia.


Schizophrenia Bulletin | 2013

Epidemiological and Clinical Characterization Following a First Psychotic Episode in Major Depressive Disorder: Comparisons With Schizophrenia and Bipolar I Disorder in the Cavan-Monaghan First Episode Psychosis Study (CAMFEPS)

Olabisi Owoeye; Tara Kingston; Paul Scully; Patrizia Baldwin; David Browne; Anthony Kinsella; Vincent Russell; Eadbhard O’Callaghan; John L. Waddington

While recent research on psychotic illness has focussed on the nosological, clinical, and biological relationships between schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, little attention has been directed to the most common other psychotic diagnosis, major depressive disorder with psychotic features (MDDP). As this diagnostic category captures the confluence between dimensions of psychotic and affective psychopathology, it is of unappreciated heuristic potential to inform on the nature of psychotic illness. Therefore, the epidemiology and clinical characteristics of MDDP were compared with those of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder within the Cavan-Monaghan First Episode Psychosis Study (n = 370). Epidemiologically, the first psychotic episode of MDDP (n = 77) was uniformly distributed across the adult life span, while schizophrenia (n = 73) and bipolar disorder (n = 73) were primarily disorders of young adulthood; the incidence of MDDP, like bipolar disorder, did not differ between the sexes, while the incidence of schizophrenia was more common in males than in females. Clinically, MDDP was characterized by negative symptoms, executive dysfunction, neurological soft signs (NSS), premorbid intellectual function, premorbid adjustment, and quality of life similar to those for schizophrenia, while bipolar disorder was characterized by less prominent negative symptoms, executive dysfunction and NSS, and better quality of life. These findings suggest that what we currently categorize as MDDP may be more closely aligned with other psychotic diagnoses than has been considered previously. They indicate that differences in how psychosis is manifested vis-à-vis depression and mania may be quantitative rather than qualitative and occur within a dimensional space, rather than validating categorical distinctions.


Schizophrenia Research | 2010

Frontonasal dysmorphology in bipolar disorder by 3D laser surface imaging and geometric morphometrics: Comparisons with schizophrenia

Robin J. Hennessy; Patrizia Baldwin; David Browne; Anthony Kinsella; John L. Waddington

Any developmental relationship between bipolar disorder and schizophrenia engenders continuing debate. As the brain and face emerge in embryological intimacy, brain dysmorphogenesis is accompanied by facial dysmorphogenesis. 3D laser surface imaging was used to capture the facial surface of 13 male and 14 female patients with bipolar disorder in comparison with 61 male and 75 female control subjects and with 37 male and 32 female patients with schizophrenia. Surface images were analysed using geometric morphometrics and 3D visualisations to identify domains of facial shape that distinguish bipolar patients from controls and bipolar patients from those with schizophrenia. Both male and female bipolar patients evidenced significant facial dysmorphology: common to male and female patients was overall facial widening, increased width of nose, narrowing of mouth and upward displacement of the chin; dysmorphology differed between male and female patients for nose length, lip thickness and tragion height. There were few morphological differences in comparison with schizophrenia patients. That dysmorphology of the frontonasal prominences and related facial regions in bipolar disorder is more similar to than different from that found in schizophrenia indicates some common dysmorphogenesis. Bipolar disorder and schizophrenia might reflect similar insult(s) acting over slightly differing time-frames or slightly differing insult(s) acting over a similar time-frame.


Biological Psychiatry | 2008

Chitinase-3-Like 1 (CHI3L1) Gene and Schizophrenia: Genetic Association and a Potential Functional Mechanism

Mao Sheng Yang; Derek W. Morris; Gary Donohoe; Elaine Kenny; Colm T. O'Dushalaine; Siobhan Schwaiger; Jeanne Marie Nangle; Sarah Clarke; Paul Scully; John P. Quinn; David Meagher; Patrizia Baldwin; Niall Crumlish; Eadbhard O'Callaghan; John L. Waddington; Michael Gill; Aiden Corvin

BACKGROUND Gene expression data and association analyses in two Chinese samples implicate chitinase 3-like 1 (CHI3L1), a cellular survival gene, in schizophrenia susceptibility. METHODS We tested whether the association data are robust to replication in a Caucasian schizophrenia sample and performed a comprehensive investigation of common genetic variation at the locus. RESULTS In a sample of 375 case and 812 control subjects we identified significant association with the same risk allele at the promoter single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) associated in the original study (rs10399805; p = .018) and with another SNP at intron 7 of CHI3L1 (rs2275351; p = .008). The rs10399805 SNP is located at position -247 and disrupts the C/EBP-AML-1 binding site in the gene promoter; the risk allele is predicted to increase CHI3L1 expression, as has been reported in several postmortem schizophrenia studies. Carriers of the risk variant presented with fewer positive symptoms and relatively spared cognitive performance compared with other schizophrenia patients. CONCLUSIONS These findings support a functional mechanism for involvement of CHI3L1 in schizophrenia susceptibility, possibly contributing to a less severe illness. The associated variants in this study are not well tagged by all Whole-Genome Association (WGA) platforms, suggesting additional genotyping may be necessary despite the imminent availability of WGA data from large SZ samples. Because CHI3L1 may be involved in transmission of stress-induced cellular responses, studies of interaction with known environmental risk factors may also be warranted.


Psychological Medicine | 2013

Diagnostic trajectory, interplay and convergence/divergence across all 12 DSM-IV psychotic diagnoses: 6-year follow-up of the Cavan-Monaghan First Episode Psychosis Study (CAMFEPS).

Tara Kingston; Paul Scully; David Browne; Patrizia Baldwin; Anthony Kinsella; Russell; Eadbhard O'Callaghan; John L. Waddington

BACKGROUND The boundaries of psychotic illness and the extent to which operational diagnostic categories are distinct in the long term remain poorly understood. Clarification of these issues requires prospective evaluation of diagnostic trajectory, interplay and convergence/divergence across psychotic illness, without a priori diagnostic or other restrictions. METHOD The Cavan-Monaghan First Episode Psychosis Study (CAMFEPS), conducted using methods to attain the closest approximation to epidemiological completeness, incepts all 12 DSM-IV psychotic diagnoses. In this study we applied methodologies to achieve diagnostic reassessments on follow-up, at a mean of 6.4 years after first presentation, for 196 (97%) of the first 202 cases, with quantification of prospective and retrospective consistency. RESULTS Over 6 years, the 12 initial psychotic diagnoses were characterized by numerous transitions but only limited convergence towards a smaller number of more stable diagnostic nodes. In particular, for initial brief psychotic disorder (BrP), in 85% of cases this was the harbinger of long-term evolution to serious psychotic illness of diagnostic diversity; for initial major depressive disorder with psychotic features (MDDP), in 18% of cases this was associated with mortality of diverse causality; and for initial psychotic disorder not otherwise specified (PNOS), 31% of cases continued to defy DSM-IV criteria. CONCLUSIONS CAMFEPS methodology revealed, on an individual case basis, a diversity of stabilities in, and transitions between, all 12 DSM-IV psychotic diagnoses over 6 years; thus, psychotic illness showed longitudinal disrespect to current nosology and may be better accommodated by a dimensional model. In particular, a first episode of BrP or MDDP may benefit from more vigorous, sustained interventions.


Archive | 2004

Controversies in schizophrenia research: the ‘continuum’ challenge, heterogeneity vs homogeneity, and lifetime developmental-‘neuroprogressive’ trajectory

Patrizia Baldwin; Robin J. Hennessy; Maria G. Morgan; John F. Quinn; Paul Scully; John L. Waddington

In reviewing the extent to which our understanding has advanced between the 4thand 5thsymposia on Search for the Causes of Schizophrenia, the conclusion is salutary: a committed and expanding research community, able to apply an increasing armamentarium of molecular genetic, neuropathological, neuroimaging and additional techniques, has made only modest gains over this five-year period. In the face of such a slow (though not negligible) rate of progress, it is necessary to give further consideration to some of the premises which guide current thinking, as they may be impeding rather than facilitating these endeavours.


Archive | 2010

The 'Totality' of Psychosis: Epidemiology and Developmental Pathobiology

Olabisi Owoeye; Tara Kingston; Robin J. Hennessy; Patrizia Baldwin; David Browne; Paul Scully; Anthony Kinsella; Vincent Russell; Eadbhard O’Callaghan; John L. Waddington

Among numerous impediments to further advancement between the fifth and sixth symposia on Search for the Causes of Schizophrenia, several uncertainties endure: (i) What are the boundaries of psychotic illness? (ii) Where do we position what we currently conceptualise and diagnose as schizophrenia within the much broader reality of psychotic disorder among those with serious mental illness and, indeed, of psychotic phenomena among the general population? (iii) To what extent are those components of psychotic illness that we resolve into separate diagnostic categories actually distinct in any fundamental way in terms of their epidemiological, clinical and pathobiological ‘signature’?


Schizophrenia Bulletin | 2005

Epidemiology of First-Episode Psychosis: Illustrating the Challenges Across Diagnostic Boundaries Through the Cavan-Monaghan Study at 8 Years

Patrizia Baldwin; David Browne; Paul Scully; John F. Quinn; Maria G. Morgan; Anthony Kinsella; John Owens; Vincent Russell; Eadbhard O'Callaghan; John L. Waddington

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John L. Waddington

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

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Paul Scully

University College Cork

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Anthony Kinsella

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

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David Browne

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

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Robin J. Hennessy

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

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Derek W. Morris

National University of Ireland

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Gary Donohoe

National University of Ireland

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