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Evidence from imaging resilience genetics for a protective mechanism against schizophrenia in the ventral visual pathway

Authors :
Eva Raspor
Andreas Reif
David Edmund Johannes Linden
Peter K. Hahn
Meike D. Hettwer
Thomas M. Lancaster
Wolf Singer
Nina Roth Mota
Robert A. Bittner
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

IntroductionIlluminating neurobiological mechanisms underlying the protective effect of recently discovered common genetic resilience variants for schizophrenia is crucial for more effective prevention efforts. Current models implicate adaptive neuroplastic changes in the visual system and their pro-cognitive effects as a schizophrenia resilience mechanism. We investigated whether common genetic resilience variants might affect brain structure in similar neural circuits.MethodUsing structural magnetic resonance imaging, we measured the impact of an established schizophrenia polygenic resilience score (PRSResilience) on cortical volume, thickness, and surface area in 101 healthy subjects and in a replication sample of 33,224 healthy subjects (UK Biobank).FindingWe observed a significant positive whole-brain correlation between PRSResilience and cortical volume in the right fusiform gyrus (FFG) (r=0.35; p=.0004). Post-hoc analyses in this cluster revealed an impact of PRSResilience on cortical surface area. The replication sample showed a positive correlation between PRSResilience and global cortical volume and surface area in the left FFG.ConclusionOur findings represent the first evidence of a neurobiological correlate of a genetic resilience factor for schizophrenia. They support the view that schizophrenia resilience emerges from strengthening neural circuits in the ventral visual pathway and an increased capacity for the disambiguation of social and non-social visual information. This may aid psychosocial functioning, ameliorate the detrimental effects of subtle perceptual and cognitive disturbances in at-risk individuals, and facilitate coping with the cognitive and psychosocial consequences of stressors. Our results thus provide a novel link between visual cognition, the vulnerability-stress concept and schizophrenia resilience models.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........bd990bab5619b216447733d5f80594ef