RT Journal A1 McGue M, Gottesman II T1 A single dominant gene still cannot account for the transmission of schizophrenia JF Archives of General Psychiatry JO Archives of General Psychiatry YR 1989 FD May 1 VO 46 IS 5 SP 478 OP 479 DO 10.1001/archpsyc.1989.01810050092016 UL http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/archpsyc.1989.01810050092016 AB To the Editor.—  Holzman et al1 have written another in a series of thought-provoking reports describing the nature of the association between eye movement dysfunctions (EMDs) and schizophrenia. Although these researchers have convincingly established the existence of a familial association between EMDs and schizophrenia, we question whether their single dominant gene model can account for the joint transmission of these two characteristics.Holzman et al, in explicitly formulating a model for the joint transmission of schizophrenia and EMDs, necessarily propose a model for the familial transmission of schizophrenia. The validity of their model should be judged in relation to the large research literature aimed at characterizing the genetic transmission of schizophrenia.2 The latent trait model proposed by Holzman et al assumes that the transmission of schizophrenia, and for that matter EMDs, is due entirely to the segregation of two alleles (eg, genes a and A) at a