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Cortical profiles of numerous psychiatric disorders and normal development share a common pattern

Authors :
Cao, Zhipeng
Cupertino, Renata B.
Ottino-Gonzalez, Jonatan
Murphy, Alistair
Pancholi, Devarshi
Juliano, Anthony
Chaarani, Bader
Albaugh, Matthew
Yuan, Dekang
Schwab, Nathan
Stafford, James
Goudriaan, Anna E.
Hutchison, Kent
Li, Chiang-Shan R.
Luijten, Maartje
Groefsema, Martine
Momenan, Reza
Schmaal, Lianne
Sinha, Rajita
van Holst, Ruth J.
Veltman, Dick J.
Wiers, Reinout W.
Porjesz, Bernice
Lett, Tristram
Banaschewski, Tobias
Bokde, Arun L. W.
Desrivières, Sylvane
Flor, Herta
Grigis, Antoine
Gowland, Penny
Heinz, Andreas
Brühl, Rüdiger
Martinot, Jean-Luc
Martinot, Marie-Laure Paillère
Artiges, Eric
Nees, Frauke
Orfanos, Dimitri Papadopoulos
Paus, Tomáš
Poustka, Luise
Hohmann, Sarah
Millenet, Sabina
Fröhner, Juliane H.
Robinson, Lauren
Smolka, Michael N.
Walter, Henrik
Winterer, Jeanne
Schumann, Gunter
Whelan, Robert
Bhatt, Ravi R.
Zhu, Alyssa
Conrod, Patricia
Jahanshad, Neda
Thompson, Paul M.
Mackey, Scott
Garavan, Hugh
Source :
Molecular Psychiatry; 20220101, Issue: Preprints p1-12, 12p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The neurobiological bases of the association between development and psychopathology remain poorly understood. Here, we identify a shared spatial pattern of cortical thickness (CT) in normative development and several psychiatric and neurological disorders. Principal component analysis (PCA) was applied to CT of 68 regions in the Desikan-Killiany atlas derived from three large-scale datasets comprising a total of 41,075 neurotypical participants. PCA produced a spatially broad first principal component (PC1) that was reproducible across datasets. Then PC1 derived from healthy adult participants was compared to the pattern of CT differences associated with psychiatric and neurological disorders comprising a total of 14,886 cases and 20,962 controls from seven ENIGMA disease-related working groups, normative maturation and aging comprising a total of 17,697 scans from the ABCD Study® and the IMAGEN developmental study, and 17,075 participants from the ENIGMA Lifespan working group, as well as gene expression maps from the Allen Human Brain Atlas. Results revealed substantial spatial correspondences between PC1 and widespread lower CT observed in numerous psychiatric disorders. Moreover, the PC1 pattern was also correlated with the spatial pattern of normative maturation and aging. The transcriptional analysis identified a set of genes including KCNA2, KCNS1and KCNS2with expression patterns closely related to the spatial pattern of PC1. The gene category enrichment analysis indicated that the transcriptional correlations of PC1 were enriched to multiple gene ontology categories and were specifically over-represented starting at late childhood, coinciding with the onset of significant cortical maturation and emergence of psychopathology during the prepubertal-to-pubertal transition. Collectively, the present study reports a reproducible latent pattern of CT that captures interregional profiles of cortical changes in both normative brain maturation and a spectrum of psychiatric disorders. The pubertal timing of the expression of PC1-related genes implicates disrupted neurodevelopment in the pathogenesis of the spectrum of psychiatric diseases emerging during adolescence.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13594184 and 14765578
Issue :
Preprints
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Molecular Psychiatry
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs61154577
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41380-022-01855-6