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Smaller anterior subgenual cingulate volume mediates the effect of girls’ early sexual maturation on negative psychobehavioral outcome

Authors :
Noriaki Yahata
Shuntaro Ando
Mio Masaoka
Naohiro Okada
Tsuyoshi Araki
Shinsuke Koike
Mariko Hiraiwa-Hasegawa
Rie Toriyama
Syudo Yamasaki
Kingo Sawada
Kentaro Morita
Daisuke Koshiyama
Shinya Fujikawa
Yukiko Kano
Kiyoto Kasai
Kaori Endo
Sho Kanata
Atsushi Nishida
Noriko Sugimoto
Source :
NeuroImage, Vol 209, Iss, Pp 116478-(2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

Early-maturing girls are relatively likely to experience compromised psychobehavioral outcomes. Some studies have explored the association between puberty and brain morphology in adolescents, while the results were non-specific for females or the method was a region-of-interest analysis. To our knowledge, no large-scale study has comprehensively explored the effects of pubertal timing on whole-brain volumetric development or the neuroanatomical substrates of the association in girls between pubertal timing and psychobehavioral outcomes. We collected structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data of a subsample (N ​= ​203, mean age 11.6 years) from a large-scale population-based birth cohort. Tanner stage, a scale of physical maturation in adolescents, was rated almost simultaneously with MRI scan. The Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire total difficulties (SDQ-TD) scores were rated by primary parents some duration after MRI scan (mean age 12.1 years). In each sex group, we examined brain regions associated with Tanner stage using whole-brain analysis controlling for chronological age, followed by an exploration of brain regions also associated with the SDQ-TD scores. We also performed mediation analyses. In girls, Tanner stage was significantly negatively correlated with gray matter volumes (GMVs) in the anterior/middle cingulate cortex (ACC/MCC), of which the subgenual ACC (sgACC) showed a negative correlation between GMVs and SDQ-TD scores. Smaller GMVs in the sgACC mediated the association between higher Tanner stages and higher SDQ-TD scores. We found no significant results in boys. Our results from a minimally biased, large-scale sample provide new insights into neuroanatomical correlates of the effect of pubertal timing on developmental psychological difficulties emerging in adolescence.

Details

ISSN :
10538119
Volume :
209
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
NeuroImage
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a36d1ae5b5459ab77e1a92cdeb39b7cc