UofT - Department of Psychiatry

Anne S. Bassett @annes-bassett ?

active 1 year, 4 months ago
Avatar Image Anne S. Bassett
  • Title

    Dr.

  • Name

    Anne S. Bassett

  • Group

    Faculty

  • Rank

    Full Professor

  • Division1

    Schizophrenia

  • Division2

    Psychiatry, Health & Disease

  • Institution

    CAMH – Russell Street Site

  • Address

    33 Russell Street

  • Room

    Main Building, Room 1100

  • City/Prov

    Toronto, ON

  • Postal Code

    M5S 2S1

  • Telephone

    416-535-8501

  • Extension

    2731

  • Email

    private

  • Fax

    416-535-7199

  • Research Interests

    Dr. Anne Bassett (www.chairs.gc.ca) holds the Canada Research Chair in Schizophrenia Genetics and Genomic Disorders and is an international leader in studying the genetics of schizophrenia. In pioneering work, the Bassett group is identifying and characterizing genetic subtypes of schizophrenia. It is now apparent that a substantial proportion of patients with schizophrenia may have a new or inherited genetic change involving one of several major copy number variants. These structural genetic changes represent an important genetic mechanism in schizophrenia that may also have congenital and later onset medical conditions as part of their expression. The associated genomic disorders present opportunities for research findings to be directly translated into clinical practice. 22q11.2 Deletion Syndrome (22q11.2DS) is the prototype of these multisystem disorders. The associated 22q11.2 deletion is the first and most powerful molecular risk factor identified for schizophrenia. Animal (e.g., mouse) models are available and can confirm and extend human research discoveries, including those related to physical illness, cognitive functioning, brain imaging, neuropathology and treatment response. The main aim of Dr. Bassett’s Clinical Genetics Research Program is to delineate the many genetic variants, structural and sequence-based, new and inherited, and the modifying factors, that are involved in causing schizophrenia and other developmental disorders. These findings are leading to new insights into disease mechanisms and treatment and prevention strategies.

Private Fields

Avatar Image Anne S. Bassett