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Investigating the genetic and environmental basis of head micromovements during MRI

Authors :
Frauke Beyer
Katrin Horn
S. Frenzel
Edith Hofer
Maria J. Knol
Filip Morys
Uku Vainik
Sandra Van der Auwera
Katharina Wittfeld
Yasaman Saba
Hieab HH Adams
Robin Bülow
Hans Grabe
Georg Homuth
Marisa Koini
Markus Loeffler
Helena Schmidt
Reinhold Schmidt
Alexander Teumer
MW Vernooij
Arno Villringer
Henry Völzke
Hazel Zonneveld
A. Dagher
Markus Scholz
AV Witte
Source :
bioRxiv
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

IntroductionHead motion during magnetic resonance imaging is heritable. Further, it shares phenotypical and genetic variance with body mass index (BMI) and impulsivity. Yet, to what extent this trait is related to single genetic variants and physiological or behavioral features is unknown. We investigated the genetic basis of head motion in a meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies. Further, we tested whether physiological or psychological measures, such as respiratory rate or impulsivity, mediated the relationship between BMI and head motion.MethodsWe conducted a genome-wide association meta-analysis for mean and maximal framewise head displacement (FD) in seven population neuroimaging cohorts (UK Biobank, LIFE-Adult, Rotterdam Study cohort 1-3, Austrian Stroke Prevention Family Study, Study of Health in Pomerania; total N = 35.109). We performed a pre-registered analysis to test whether respiratory rate, respiratory volume, self-reported impulsivity and heart rate mediated the relationship between BMI and mean FD in LIFE-Adult.ResultsNo variant reached genome-wide significance for neither mean nor maximal FD. Neither physiological nor psychological measures mediated the relationship between BMI and head motion.ConclusionBased on these findings from a large meta-GWAS and pre-registered follow-up study, we conclude that the previously reported genetic correlation between BMI and head motion relies on polygenic variation, and that neither psychological nor simple physiological parameters explain a substantial amount of variance in the association of BMI and head motion. Future imaging studies should thus rigorously control for head motion at acquisition and during preprocessing.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
bioRxiv
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b6dc1ddc6358688a3626a491bca83b3b