neurogenetika
Neurogenetika, or neurogenetics, is the branch of medical genetics that studies how genetic variation influences the development, structure, and function of the nervous system, and how these variations contribute to neurological and psychiatric disorders. The field encompasses neurodevelopment, neurodegeneration, neuroimmunology, and neural plasticity. Research uses methods ranging from classic linkage and candidate-gene studies to modern high-throughput sequencing, genome-wide association studies, and functional analyses in cells and animal models. It also examines how genetic and environmental factors interact to shape nervous system traits.
Clinically, neurogenetika covers monogenic disorders such as Huntington's disease (HTT), various spinocerebellar ataxias, Rett syndrome (MECP2),
Technologies and models include exome and genome sequencing, gene panels, induced pluripotent stem cells, brain organoids,
Challenges include interpreting variants of uncertain significance, incomplete penetrance, pleiotropy, and ethical issues around incidental findings,