1. The Link Between Autism and Sex-Related Neuroanatomy, and Associated Cognition and Gene Expression
- Author
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Floris, D.L., Peng, H., Warrier, V., Lombardo, M.V., Pretzsch, C.M., Moreau, C., Tsompanidis, A., Gong, W., Mennes, M.J.J., Llera, A., Rooij, D. van, Oldehinkel, M., Forde, N.J., Charman, T., Tillmann, J., Banaschewski, T., Moessnang, C., Durston, S., Holt, R.J., Ecker, C., Dell'Acqua, F., Loth, E., Bourgeron, T., Murphy, D.G.M., Marquand, A.F., Lai, M.C., Buitelaar, J.K., Baron-Cohen, S., Beckmann, C.F., Floris, D.L., Peng, H., Warrier, V., Lombardo, M.V., Pretzsch, C.M., Moreau, C., Tsompanidis, A., Gong, W., Mennes, M.J.J., Llera, A., Rooij, D. van, Oldehinkel, M., Forde, N.J., Charman, T., Tillmann, J., Banaschewski, T., Moessnang, C., Durston, S., Holt, R.J., Ecker, C., Dell'Acqua, F., Loth, E., Bourgeron, T., Murphy, D.G.M., Marquand, A.F., Lai, M.C., Buitelaar, J.K., Baron-Cohen, S., and Beckmann, C.F.
- Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext, OBJECTIVE: The male preponderance in prevalence of autism is among the most pronounced sex ratios across neurodevelopmental conditions. The authors sought to elucidate the relationship between autism and typical sex-differential neuroanatomy, cognition, and related gene expression. METHODS: Using a novel deep learning framework trained to predict biological sex based on T(1)-weighted structural brain images, the authors compared sex prediction model performance across neurotypical and autistic males and females. Multiple large-scale data sets comprising T(1)-weighted MRI data were employed at four stages of the analysis pipeline: 1) pretraining, with the UK Biobank sample (>10,000 individuals); 2) transfer learning and validation, with the ABIDE data sets (1,412 individuals, 5-56 years of age); 3) test and discovery, with the EU-AIMS/AIMS-2-TRIALS LEAP data set (681 individuals, 6-30 years of age); and 4) specificity, with the NeuroIMAGE and ADHD200 data sets (887 individuals, 7-26 years of age). RESULTS: Across both ABIDE and LEAP, features positively predictive of neurotypical males were on average significantly more predictive of autistic males (ABIDE: Cohen's d=0.48; LEAP: Cohen's d=1.34). Features positively predictive of neurotypical females were on average significantly less predictive of autistic females (ABIDE: Cohen's d=1.25; LEAP: Cohen's d=1.29). These differences in sex prediction accuracy in autism were not observed in individuals with ADHD. In autistic females, the male-shifted neurophenotype was further associated with poorer social sensitivity and emotional face processing while also associated with gene expression patterns of midgestational cell types. CONCLUSIONS: The results demonstrate an increased resemblance in both autistic male and female individuals' neuroanatomy with male-characteristic patterns associated with typically sex-differential social cognitive features and related gene expression patterns. The findings hold promise for future re
- Published
- 2023