Profile photo Jacob Vorstman

Jacob Vorstman

Associate Professor

Biography

Jacob Vorstman was trained to become a psychiatrist (2008) and a Child & Adolescent Psychiatrist (2009) at the University Medical Center Utrecht. He defended his PhD thesis at the University of Utrecht / Rudolf Magnus Institute of Neuroscience in 2008 on the genetic and psychiatric aspects of the 22q11.2 deletion syndrome.  Currently, he combines his clinical work at the department of psychiatry with several ongoing research projects in the field of the genetics of autism and schizophrenia.

From 2004 to 2006 he worked in the Genetics lab of Prof. Dr. B. Emanuel, Division of Human Genetics and Molecular Biology at the University of Pennsylvania. He learned the practical and analytical aspects of molecular genetic research using different methods (FISH, PCR, MLPA, Real-time PCR, RNA expression) on genetic material from 22q11DS patients. Concurrently, h worked at the Department of Child en Adolescent Psychiatry of the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia where  he has set up a child psychiatry outpatient clinic for 22q11DS patients.

Gradually he has broadened the scope from 22q11DS to a wider perspective; the role of structural genomic abnormalities in autism and schizophrenia and trying to advance our understanding of the genetic architecture underlying these disorders. 


Currently, he is the PI of a research lab at the Brain Center Rudolf Magnus, his team includes a post doctoral fellow, a research assistant, a PhD student and several master students. To date he has supervised four PhD students towards a successful defense of their thesis. He is the PI of two large, funded, genetic studies in autism and schizophrenia. In addition Dr Vorstman is an executive board member in an international consortium for the study of the behavioral phenotype in the 22q11.2 deletion syndrome. This consortium encompasses 22 research sites en is funded by the NIMH (12M US Dollar). One of his strengths is his combined experience; he succesfully integrates his research tasks at the Brain Center with a clinical appointment as a child and adolescent psychiatrist at the University Medical Center Utrecht. Over the past years he has been fortunate to develop close and productive collaborations with many investigators in the genetics of psychiatric disorders across the world.

Research line

Genetics of developmental disorders and psychosis

Most recent key publications

1: Vorstman JA, Ophoff RA; Genetic causes of developmental disorders. Curr Opin Neurol. 2013 Feb 19
2: Vorstman JA, Anney RJ, Derks EM, Gallagher L, Gill M, de Jonge MV, van Engeland H, Kahn RS, Ophoff RA; the Autism Genome Project, the International Schizophrenia Consortium. No evidence that common genetic risk variation is shared between schizophrenia and autism. Am J Med Genet B. 2013 Jan
3: Duijff SN, Klaassen PW, de Veye HF, Beemer FA, Sinnema G, Vorstman JA. Cognitive development in children with 22q11.2 deletion syndrome. Br J Psychiatry. 2012 Jun;200(6):462-8.
4: Vorstman JA, van Daalen E, Jalali GR, Schmidt ER, Pasterkamp RJ, de Jonge M, Hennekam EA, Janson E, Staal WG, van der Zwaag B, Burbach JP, Kahn RS, Emanuel BS, van Engeland H, Ophoff RA. A double hit implicates DIAPH3 as an autism risk gene. Mol Psychiatry. 2011 Apr;16(4):442-51
5: Vorstman JA, Staal WG, van Daalen E, van Engeland H, Hochstenbach PF, Franke L. Identification of novel autism candidate regions through analysis of reported cytogenetic abnormalities associated with autism. Mol Psychiatry. 2006 Jan;11(1):1, 18-28.

Recent publications

Personal preferences for treatment and care during and after a First Episode Psychosis Inge M W van der Heijden-Hobus, Bram-Sieben Rosema, Jacob A S Vorstman, Martien J H Kas, Sigrid K Franke, Nynke Boonstra, Iris E C Sommer
Early Intervention in Psychiatry, 2023, vol. 18, p.415-424
Updated clinical practice recommendations for managing children with 22q11.2 deletion syndrome Sólveig Óskarsdóttir, Erik Boot, Terrence Blaine Crowley, Joanne C.Y. Loo, Jill M. Arganbright, Marco Armando, Adriane L. Baylis, Elemi J. Breetvelt, René M. Castelein, Madeline Chadehumbe, Christopher M. Cielo, Steven de Reuver, Stephan Eliez, Ania M. Fiksinski, Brian J. Forbes, Emily Gallagher, Sarah E. Hopkins, Oksana A. Jackson, Lorraine Levitz-Katz, Gunilla Klingberg, Michele P. Lambert, Bruno Marino, Maria R. Mascarenhas, Julie Moldenhauer, Edward M. Moss, Beata Anna Nowakowska, Ani Orchanian-Cheff, Carolina Putotto, Gabriela M. Repetto, Erica Schindewolf, Maude Schneider, Cynthia B. Solot, Kathleen E. Sullivan, Ann Swillen, Marta Unolt, Jason P. Van Batavia, Claudia Vingerhoets, Jacob Vorstman, Anne S. Bassett, Donna M. McDonald-McGinn
Genetics in Medicine, 2023, vol. 25
Grammatical skills of Dutch children with 22q11.2 Deletion Syndrome in comparison with children with Developmental Language Disorder Tessel Boerma, Emma Everaert, Dinte Vlieger, Maaike Steggink, Iris Selten, Michiel Houben, Jacob Vorstman, Ellen Gerrits, Frank Wijnen
Frontiers in Communication, 2023, vol. 8
Executive functioning in preschoolers with 22q11.2 deletion syndrome and the impact of congenital heart defects Emma Everaert, Jacob A.S. Vorstman, Iris S. Selten, Martijn G. Slieker, Frank Wijnen, Tessel D. Boerma, Michiel L. Houben
Journal of neurodevelopmental disorders, 2023, vol. 15, p.15
Behaviors related to autism spectrum disorder in children with developmental language disorder and children with 22q11.2 deletion syndrome Iris Selten, Tessel Boerma, Emma Everaert, Ellen Gerrits, Michiel Houben, Frank Wijnen, Jacob Vorstman
Autism and Developmental Language Impairments, 2023, vol. 8, p.1-18
Untargeted metabolic analysis in dried blood spots reveals metabolic signature in 22q11.2 deletion syndrome Dorinde Korteling, Marco P Boks, Ania M Fiksinski, Ilja N van Hoek, Jacob A S Vorstman, Nanda M Verhoeven-Duif, Judith J M Jans, Janneke R Zinkstok
Translational Psychiatry, 2022, vol. 12, p.1-7