1. Hierarchical Genetic Organization of Human Cortical Surface Area
- Author
-
Chen, Chi-Hua, Gutierrez, ED, Thompson, Wes, Panizzon, Matthew S, Jernigan, Terry L, Eyler, Lisa T, Fennema-Notestine, Christine, Jak, Amy J, Neale, Michael C, Franz, Carol E, Lyons, Michael J, Grant, Michael D, Fischl, Bruce, Seidman, Larry J, Tsuang, Ming T, Kremen, William S, and Dale, Anders M
- Subjects
Biological Psychology ,Biological Sciences ,Psychology ,Neurosciences ,Brain Disorders ,Genetics ,Underpinning research ,1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,Neurological ,Brain Mapping ,Cerebral Cortex ,Gene Expression ,Genes ,Genetic Variation ,Humans ,Image Processing ,Computer-Assisted ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Phenotype ,Twins ,Dizygotic ,Twins ,Monozygotic ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Surface area of the cerebral cortex is a highly heritable trait, yet little is known about genetic influences on regional cortical differentiation in humans. Using a data-driven, fuzzy clustering technique with magnetic resonance imaging data from 406 twins, we parceled cortical surface area into genetic subdivisions, creating a human brain atlas based solely on genetically informative data. Boundaries of the genetic divisions corresponded largely to meaningful structural and functional regions; however, the divisions represented previously undescribed phenotypes different from conventional (non-genetically based) parcellation systems. The genetic organization of cortical area was hierarchical, modular, and predominantly bilaterally symmetric across hemispheres. We also found that the results were consistent with human-specific regions being subdivisions of previously described, genetically based lobar regionalization patterns.
- Published
- 2012