Addressing the methodological challenge of developing rigorous models of gene networks, Dr. Pergola published an article associating a reproducible schizophrenia risk gene network with treatment response to olanzapine in patients with schizophrenia (Pergola, Di Carlo, et al., 2019 Biological Psychiatry 86(1):45-55). He also investigated behavioral developmental trajectories associated with genetic risk for schizophrenia in children and adolescents (Pergola et al., 2019 World Psychiatry 18(3):366-367).
To assess gene network changes along the lifespan, Dr. Pergola analyzed the LIBD repository of postmortem brain mRNA sequencing data from the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, hippocampus, and caudate nucleus of 562 individuals deceased between fetal and older adult age with a novel pipeline ensuring age-specific networks comparable with each other. Results revealed the centrality of early prefrontal cortical schizophrenia risk gene networks and have been submitted for a presentation at several major conferences in the field of pyschiatric neuroscience. Genetic risk for schizophrenia has also been related to dopaminergic function (Braun et al, 2021 Nature Communications 12(1), 3478) and to treatment response in patients with the disorder (Rampino et al, 2021 European Psychiatry 64(1), pp. e39).
To generate neuroimaging and genetic data, FLOURISH recruited 205 participants in Bari, Italy (47 neurotypical adults, 111 neurotypical young individuals, 12 young individuals at high familial risk for schizophrenia, and 35 young individuals at high clinical risk for schizophrenia). We hypothesized that risk for schizophrenia is related with early manifestation of adult connectivity patterns by assessing differences in brain connectivity between the young and adult neurotypical groups; brain connectivity patterns showing an effect of age were tested for differences between young neurotypical and young at-risk participants. Results supporting the hypothesis have been submitted for a presentation at several international meetings. Part of the neuroimaging work has been used for a study of structural brain developmental trajectories (Wierenga et al, 2020 Human Brain Mapping doi: 10.1002/hbm.25204). Clinical risk for psychosis has also been investigated independently of genetic risk, supporting the idea that early life environment plays a role in psychosis (Antonucci et al., 2021 BMC Psychology 9(1), 47).