artículo científico
Genetic structure of personality factors and bipolar disorder in families segregating bipolar disorder
Fecha
2011Autor
Hare, Elizabeth
Contreras Rojas, Javier
Flores, Deborah
Jerez, Álvaro
Nicolini Sánchez, José Humberto
Ontiveros Sánchez de la Barquera, Jose Alfonso
Almasy, Laura
Escamilla, Michael
Raventós Vorst, Henriette
Institución
Resumen
Bipolar disorder (BPD) has been associated with variations in personality dimensions,
but the nature of this relationship has been unclear. Inthis study, theheritabilities of BPDandtheBig
Five personality factors and the genetic correlationsbetweenBPDandpersonalityfactorsarereported.
Methods: The participants in this study were 1073 individuals from172 families of Mexican or Central
American ancestry. Heritabilities and genetic correlations were calculated under a polygenic model
using the maximum-likelihood method of obtaining variance components implemented in the
SOLAR software package.
Results: Heritabilities of 0.49, 0.43, and 0.43 were found for the narrowest phenotype (schizoaffective
bipolar and bipolar I), the intermediate phenotype (schizoaffective bipolar, bipolar I, and bipolar II),
and the broadest phenotype (schizoaffective bipolar, bipolar I, bipolar II, and recurrent depression),
respectively. For the Big Five personality factors, heritabilities were 0.25 for agreeableness, 0.24 for
conscientiousness, 0.24 for extraversion, 0.23 for neuroticism, and 0.32 for openness to experience. For
the narrowest phenotype, a significant negative correlation (−0.32) with extraversionwas found. For
the broadest phenotype, negative correlations were found for agreeableness (−0.35), conscientiousness
(−0.39), and extraversion (−0.44). A positive correlation (0.37) was found with neuroticism.
Limitations: It is not possible to determine whether aspects of personality are factors in the
development of bipolar disorder or vice versa. The short formof theNEOdoesnotprovide the ability
to examine in detail which facets of extraversion are most closely related to bipolar disorder or to
compare our results with studies that have used the long version of the scale.
Conclusions: This study establishes a partial genetic basis for the Big Five personality factors in this set
of families, while the environmental variances demonstrate that non-genetic factors are also
important in their influence on bipolar and personality phenotypes. BPD may be most associated
with decreased extraversion (less interactionwithone's surroundings)becausepatients spendmore
time in depressive than manic states.