AI Article Synopsis

  • ADHD is a neuropsychiatric disorder that starts in childhood and can persist into adulthood, affecting cognitive functions due to abnormal brain asymmetries.
  • Six candidate genes, particularly BAIAP2, were studied in ADHD patients and found to be linked to adult ADHD in a Spanish sample.
  • The connection between BAIAP2 and adult ADHD was replicated in a German population, indicating that genetic factors may play a role in the disorder's continuity throughout life.

Article Abstract

Background: Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a childhood-onset neuropsychiatric disease that persists into adulthood in at least 30% of patients. There is evidence suggesting that abnormal left-right brain asymmetries in ADHD patients may be involved in a variety of ADHD-related cognitive processes, including sustained attention, working memory, response inhibition and planning. Although mechanisms underlying cerebral lateralization are unknown, left-right cortical asymmetry has been associated with transcriptional asymmetry at embryonic stages and several genes differentially expressed between hemispheres have been identified.

Methods: We selected six functional candidate genes showing at least 1.9-fold differential expression between hemispheres (BAIAP2, DAPPER1, LMO4, NEUROD6, ATP2B3, and ID2) and performed a case-control association study in an initial Spanish sample of 587 ADHD patients (270 adults and 317 children) and 587 control subjects.

Results: The single- and multiple-marker analysis provided evidence for a contribution of BAIAP2 to adulthood ADHD (p = .0026 and p = .0016, respectively). We thus tested BAIAP2 for replication in two independent adult samples from Germany (639 ADHD patients and 612 control subjects) and Norway (417 ADHD cases and 469 control subjects). While no significant results were observed in the Norwegian sample, we replicated the initial association between BAIAP2 and adulthood ADHD in the German population (p = .0062).

Conclusions: Our results support the participation of BAIAP2 in the continuity of ADHD across life span, at least in some of the populations analyzed, and suggest that genetic factors potentially influencing abnormal cerebral lateralization may be involved in this disorder.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biopsych.2009.06.024DOI Listing

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