Abstract
The imprinted brain theory proposes that autism spectrum disorder (ASD) represents a paternal bias in the expression of imprinted genes. This is reflected in a preference for mechanistic cognition and in the corresponding mentalistic deficits symptomatic of ASD. Psychotic spectrum disorder (PSD) would correspondingly result from an imbalance in favor of maternal and/or X-chromosome gene expression. If differences in imprinted gene expression were reflected locally in the human brain, as mouse models and other evidence suggests they are, ASD would represent not so much an “extreme male brain” as an extreme paternal one, with PSD correspondingly representing an extreme maternal brain. To the extent that copy number variation resembles imprinting and aneuploidy in nullifying or multiplying the expression of particular genes, it has been found to conform to the diametric model of mental illness peculiar to the imprinted brain theory. The fact that non-genetic factors like nutrition in pregnancy can mimic and/or interact with imprinted gene expression suggests that the theory might even be able to explain the notable effect of maternal starvation on risk of PSD—not to mention a part of the “autism epidemic” of modern affluent societies. Finally, the theory suggests that normality represents balanced cognition and that genius is an extraordinary extension of cognitive configuration in both mentalistic and mechanistic directions. Were it to prove correct, the imprinted brain theory would represent one of the biggest single advances in our understanding of the mind and of mental illness that has ever taken place and would revolutionize psychiatric diagnosis, prevention, and treatment—not to mention our understanding of epigenetics.
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Abbreviations
- ADCYAP1R1:
-
PACAP receptor
- AG:
-
Androgenetic
- AS:
-
Angelman syndrome
- ASD:
-
Autism spectrum disorder
- BPD:
-
Borderline personality disorder
- BWS:
-
Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome
- CMV:
-
Cytomegalovirus
- CNV:
-
Copy number variation
- MDD:
-
Major depressive disorder
- PACAP:
-
Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide
- PG:
-
Parthenogenetic
- PSD:
-
Psychotic spectrum disorder
- PTSD:
-
Posttraumatic stress disorder
- PWS:
-
Prader-Willi syndrome
- RORA:
-
Retinoic acid-related orphan receptor-alpha
- SRS:
-
Silver-Russell syndrome
- TPJ:
-
Temporoparietal junction
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Acknowledgments
With thanks and acknowledgements to Ahmad Abu-Akel, Will Brown, Bernard Crespi, David Haig, and Randy Jirtle.
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Badcock, C. (2013). The Imprinted Brain: How Genes Set the Balance Between Autism and Psychosis. In: Jirtle, R., Tyson, F. (eds) Environmental Epigenomics in Health and Disease. Epigenetics and Human Health. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-36827-1_5
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