14 results on '"Passiatore R"'
Search Results
2. Joint structural-functional magnetic resonance imaging features are associated with diagnosis and real-world functioning in patients with schizophrenia
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Antonucci, L. A., Fazio, L., Pergola, G., Blasi, G., Stolfa, G., Di Palo, P., Mucci, A., Rocca, P., Brasso, C., di Giannantonio, M., Maria Giordano, G., Monteleone, P., Pompili, M., Siracusano, A., Bertolino, A., Galderisi, S., Maj, M., Muzzarelli, L., Nettis, M. A., Nicoli, M., Papalino, M., Passiatore, R., Romano, R., Piegari, G., Pezzella, P., Perrottelli, A., Martinotti, G., Pettorruso, M., Fraticelli, S., Comparelli, A., Corigliano, V., Brugnoli, R., Di Lorenzo, G., Niolu, C., Ribolsi, M., Cascino, G., Esposito, F., Russo, A. G., Montemagni, C., Riccardi, C., Del Favero, E., Antonucci, L. A., Fazio, L., Pergola, G., Blasi, G., Stolfa, G., Di Palo, P., Mucci, A., Rocca, P., Brasso, C., di Giannantonio, M., Giordano, Giulia M., Monteleone, P., Pompili, M., Siracusano, A., Bertolino, A., Galderisi, S., and Maj, M.
- Subjects
Cerebral Cortex ,Real-world functioning ,Rest ,jICA ,Brain ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Structural MRI ,Settore MED/25 ,Degree centrality ,Resting-state fMRI ,Schizophrenia ,Humans ,Gray Matter ,Biological Psychiatry - Abstract
Objective: Earlier evidence suggested that structural–functional covariation in schizophrenia patients (SCZ) is associated with cognition, a predictor of functioning. Moreover, studies suggested that functional brain abnormalities of schizophrenia may be related with structural network features. However, only few studies have investigated the relationship between structural–functional covariation and both diagnosis and functioning in SCZ. We hypothesized that structural–functional covariation networks associated with diagnosis are related to real-world functioning in SCZ. Methods: We performed joint Independent Component Analysis on T1 images and resting-state fMRI-based Degree Centrality (DC) maps from 89 SCZ and 285 controls. Structural-functional covariation networks in which we found a main effect of diagnosis underwent correlation analysis to investigate their relationship with functioning. Covariation networks showing a significant association with both diagnosis and functioning underwent univariate analysis to better characterize group-level differences at the spatial level. Results: A structural–functional covariation network characterized by frontal, temporal, parietal and thalamic structural estimates significantly covaried with temporo-parietal resting-state DC. Compared with controls, SCZ had reduced structural–functional covariation within this network (pFDR = 0.005). The same measure correlated positively with both social and occupational functioning (both pFDR = 0.042). Univariate analyses revealed grey matter deviations in SCZ compared with controls within this structural–functional network in hippocampus, cerebellum, thalamus, orbito-frontal cortex, and insula. No group differences were found in DC. Conclusions: Findings support the existence of a phenotypical association between group-level differences and inter-individual heterogeneity of functional deficits in SCZ. Given that only the joint structural/functional analysis revealed this association, structural–functional covariation may be a potentially relevant schizophrenia phenotype.
- Published
- 2022
3. A thalamo-cortical genetic co-expression network is associated with thalamic functional connectivity linked with familial risk for schizophrenia
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Passiatore, R., primary, Antonucci, L.A., additional, Di Carlo, P., additional, Papalino, M., additional, Monda, A., additional, Taurisano, P., additional, Bertolino, A., additional, Pergola, G., additional, and Blasi, G., additional
- Published
- 2017
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4. Sex dimorphism controls dysbindin-related cognitive dysfunctions in mice and humans with the contribution of COMT.
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Geraci F, Passiatore R, Penzel N, Laudani S, Bertolino A, Blasi G, Graziano ACE, Kikidis GC, Mazza C, Parihar M, Rampino A, Sportelli L, Trevisan N, Drago F, Papaleo F, Sambataro F, Pergola G, and Leggio GM
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- Animals, Male, Female, Humans, Mice, Adult, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Epistasis, Genetic, Cognition physiology, Estrogens metabolism, Middle Aged, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Carrier Proteins genetics, Carrier Proteins metabolism, Dystrophin-Associated Proteins metabolism, Catechol O-Methyltransferase genetics, Catechol O-Methyltransferase metabolism, Dysbindin metabolism, Dysbindin genetics, Sex Characteristics, Memory, Short-Term physiology, Schizophrenia genetics, Schizophrenia metabolism, Cognitive Dysfunction metabolism, Cognitive Dysfunction genetics, Cognitive Dysfunction physiopathology, Prefrontal Cortex metabolism
- Abstract
Cognitive dysfunctions are core-enduring symptoms of schizophrenia, with important sex-related differences. Genetic variants of the DTBPN1 gene associated with reduced dysbindin-1 protein (Dys) expression negatively impact cognitive functions in schizophrenia through a functional epistatic interaction with Catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT). Dys is involved in the trafficking of dopaminergic receptors, crucial for prefrontal cortex (PFC) signaling regulation. Moreover, dopamine signaling is modulated by estrogens via inhibition of COMT expression. We hypothesized a sex dimorphism in Dys-related cognitive functions dependent on COMT and estrogen levels. Our multidisciplinary approach combined behavioral-molecular findings on genetically modified mice, human postmortem Dys expression data, and in vivo fMRI during a working memory task performance. We found cognitive impairments in male mice related to genetic variants characterized by reduced Dys protein expression (p
Bonferroni = 0.0001), as well as in male humans through a COMT/Dys functional epistatic interaction involving PFC brain activity during working memory (t(23) = -3.21; pFDR = 0.004). Dorsolateral PFC activity was associated with lower working memory performance in males only (p = 0.04). Also, male humans showed decreased Dys expression in dorsolateral PFC during adulthood (pFDR = 0.05). Female Dys mice showed preserved cognitive performances with deficits only with a lack of estrogen tested in an ovariectomy model (pBonferroni = 0.0001), suggesting that genetic variants reducing Dys protein expression could probably become functional in females when the protective effect of estrogens is attenuated, i.e., during menopause. Overall, our results show the differential impact of functional variants of the DTBPN1 gene interacting with COMT on cognitive functions across sexes in mice and humans, underlying the importance of considering sex as a target for patient stratification and precision medicine in schizophrenia., (© 2024. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2024
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5. The interaction between early life complications and a polygenic risk score for schizophrenia is associated with brain activity during emotion processing in healthy participants.
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Toro VD, Antonucci LA, Quarto T, Passiatore R, Fazio L, Ursini G, Chen Q, Masellis R, Torretta S, Sportelli L, Kikidis GC, Massari F, D'Ambrosio E, Rampino A, Pergola G, Weinberger DR, Bertolino A, and Blasi G
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- Humans, Male, Female, Adult, Young Adult, Genome-Wide Association Study, Risk Factors, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Prefrontal Cortex physiopathology, Prefrontal Cortex diagnostic imaging, Brain physiopathology, Brain diagnostic imaging, Healthy Volunteers, Middle Aged, Genetic Risk Score, Schizophrenia physiopathology, Schizophrenia genetics, Schizophrenia diagnostic imaging, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Multifactorial Inheritance, Emotions physiology
- Abstract
Background: Previous evidence suggests that early life complications (ELCs) interact with polygenic risk for schizophrenia (SCZ) in increasing risk for the disease. However, no studies have investigated this interaction on neurobiological phenotypes. Among those, anomalous emotion-related brain activity has been reported in SCZ, even if evidence of its link with SCZ-related genetic risk is not solid. Indeed, it is possible this relationship is influenced by non-genetic risk factors. Thus, this study investigated the interaction between SCZ-related polygenic risk and ELCs on emotion-related brain activity., Methods: 169 healthy participants (HP) in a discovery and 113 HP in a replication sample underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) during emotion processing, were categorized for history of ELCs and genome-wide genotyped. Polygenic risk scores (PRSs) were computed using SCZ-associated variants considering the most recent genome-wide association study. Furthermore, 75 patients with SCZ also underwent fMRI during emotion processing to verify consistency of their brain activity patterns with those associated with risk factors for SCZ in HP., Results: Results in the discovery and replication samples indicated no effect of PRSs, but an interaction between PRS and ELCs in left ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (VLPFC), where the greater the activity, the greater PRS only in presence of ELCs. Moreover, SCZ had greater VLPFC response than HP., Conclusions: These results suggest that emotion-related VLPFC response lies in the path from genetic and non-genetic risk factors to the clinical presentation of SCZ, and may implicate an updated concept of intermediate phenotype considering early non-genetic factors of risk for SCZ.
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- 2024
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6. Dopamine signaling enriched striatal gene set predicts striatal dopamine synthesis and physiological activity in vivo.
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Sportelli L, Eisenberg DP, Passiatore R, D'Ambrosio E, Antonucci LA, Bettina JS, Chen Q, Goldman AL, Gregory MD, Griffiths K, Hyde TM, Kleinman JE, Pardiñas AF, Parihar M, Popolizio T, Rampino A, Shin JH, Veronese M, Ulrich WS, Zink CF, Bertolino A, Howes OD, Berman KF, Weinberger DR, and Pergola G
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- Humans, Male, Female, Adult, Caudate Nucleus metabolism, Signal Transduction, Middle Aged, Hippocampus metabolism, Multifactorial Inheritance, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Dorsolateral Prefrontal Cortex metabolism, Reward, Dopamine metabolism, Dopamine biosynthesis, Schizophrenia genetics, Schizophrenia metabolism, Corpus Striatum metabolism
- Abstract
The polygenic architecture of schizophrenia implicates several molecular pathways involved in synaptic function. However, it is unclear how polygenic risk funnels through these pathways to translate into syndromic illness. Using tensor decomposition, we analyze gene co-expression in the caudate nucleus, hippocampus, and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex of post-mortem brain samples from 358 individuals. We identify a set of genes predominantly expressed in the caudate nucleus and associated with both clinical state and genetic risk for schizophrenia that shows dopaminergic selectivity. A higher polygenic risk score for schizophrenia parsed by this set of genes predicts greater dopamine synthesis in the striatum and greater striatal activation during reward anticipation. These results translate dopamine-linked genetic risk variation into in vivo neurochemical and hemodynamic phenotypes in the striatum that have long been implicated in the pathophysiology of schizophrenia., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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7. A miR-137-Related Biological Pathway of Risk for Schizophrenia Is Associated With Human Brain Emotion Processing.
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Pergola G, Rampino A, Sportelli L, Borcuk CJ, Passiatore R, Di Carlo P, Marakhovskaia A, Fazio L, Amoroso N, Castro MN, Domenici E, Gennarelli M, Khlghatyan J, Kikidis GC, Lella A, Magri C, Monaco A, Papalino M, Parihar M, Popolizio T, Quarto T, Romano R, Torretta S, Valsecchi P, Zunuer H, Blasi G, Dukart J, Beaulieu JM, and Bertolino A
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- Humans, Genome-Wide Association Study, Brain, Emotions, Schizophrenia, MicroRNAs genetics, MicroRNAs metabolism
- Abstract
Background: miR-137 is a microRNA involved in brain development, regulating neurogenesis and neuronal maturation. Genome-wide association studies have implicated miR-137 in schizophrenia risk but do not explain its involvement in brain function and underlying biology. Polygenic risk for schizophrenia mediated by miR-137 targets is associated with working memory, although other evidence points to emotion processing. We characterized the functional brain correlates of miR-137 target genes associated with schizophrenia while disentangling previously reported associations of miR-137 targets with working memory and emotion processing., Methods: Using RNA sequencing data from postmortem prefrontal cortex (N = 522), we identified a coexpression gene set enriched for miR-137 targets and schizophrenia risk genes. We validated the relationship of this set to miR-137 in vitro by manipulating miR-137 expression in neuroblastoma cells. We translated this gene set into polygenic scores of coexpression prediction and associated them with functional magnetic resonance imaging activation in healthy volunteers (n
1 = 214; n2 = 136; n3 = 2075; n4 = 1800) and with short-term treatment response in patients with schizophrenia (N = 427)., Results: In 4652 human participants, we found that 1) schizophrenia risk genes were coexpressed in a biologically validated set enriched for miR-137 targets; 2) increased expression of miR-137 target risk genes was mediated by low prefrontal miR-137 expression; 3) alleles that predict greater gene set coexpression were associated with greater prefrontal activation during emotion processing in 3 independent healthy cohorts (n1 , n2 , n3 ) in interaction with age (n4 ); and 4) these alleles predicted less improvement in negative symptoms following antipsychotic treatment in patients with schizophrenia., Conclusions: The functional translation of miR-137 target gene expression linked with schizophrenia involves the neural substrates of emotion processing., (Copyright © 2023 Society of Biological Psychiatry. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2024
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8. Dopamine and schizophrenia from bench to bedside: Discovery of a striatal co-expression risk gene set that predicts in vivo measures of striatal function.
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Sportelli L, Eisenberg DP, Passiatore R, D'Ambrosio E, Antonucci LA, Chen Q, Czarapata J, Goldman AL, Gregory M, Griffiths K, Hyde TM, Kleinman JE, Pardiñas AF, Parihar M, Popolizio T, Rampino A, Shin JH, Veronese M, Ulrich WS, Zink CF, Bertolino A, Howes OD, Berman KF, Weinberger DR, and Pergola G
- Abstract
Schizophrenia (SCZ) is characterized by a polygenic risk architecture implicating diverse molecular pathways important for synaptic function. However, how polygenic risk funnels through these pathways to translate into syndromic illness is unanswered. To evaluate biologically meaningful pathways of risk, we used tensor decomposition to characterize gene co-expression in post-mortem brain (of neurotypicals: N=154; patients with SCZ: N=84; and GTEX samples N=120) from caudate nucleus (CN), hippocampus (HP), and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC). We identified a CN-predominant gene set showing dopaminergic selectivity that was enriched for genes associated with clinical state and for genes associated with SCZ risk. Parsing polygenic risk score for SCZ based on this specific gene set (parsed-PRS), we found that greater pathway-specific SCZ risk predicted greater in vivo striatal dopamine synthesis capacity measured by [
18 F]-FDOPA PET in three independent cohorts of neurotypicals and patients (total N=235) and greater fMRI striatal activation during reward anticipation in two additional independent neurotypical cohorts (total N=141). These results reveal a 'bench to bedside' translation of dopamine-linked genetic risk variation in driving in vivo striatal neurochemical and hemodynamic phenotypes that have long been implicated in the pathophysiology of SCZ.- Published
- 2023
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9. Changes in patterns of age-related network connectivity are associated with risk for schizophrenia.
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Passiatore R, Antonucci LA, DeRamus TP, Fazio L, Stolfa G, Sportelli L, Kikidis GC, Blasi G, Chen Q, Dukart J, Goldman AL, Mattay VS, Popolizio T, Rampino A, Sambataro F, Selvaggi P, Ulrich W, Weinberger DR, Bertolino A, Calhoun VD, and Pergola G
- Subjects
- Adult, Adolescent, Humans, Child, Young Adult, Brain diagnostic imaging, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Risk Factors, Schizophrenia diagnostic imaging, Schizophrenia genetics, Psychotic Disorders
- Abstract
Alterations in fMRI-based brain functional network connectivity (FNC) are associated with schizophrenia (SCZ) and the genetic risk or subthreshold clinical symptoms preceding the onset of SCZ, which often occurs in early adulthood. Thus, age-sensitive FNC changes may be relevant to SCZ risk-related FNC. We used independent component analysis to estimate FNC from childhood to adulthood in 9,236 individuals. To capture individual brain features more accurately than single-session fMRI, we studied an average of three fMRI scans per individual. To identify potential familial risk-related FNC changes, we compared age-related FNC in first-degree relatives of SCZ patients mostly including unaffected siblings (SIB) with neurotypical controls (NC) at the same age stage. Then, we examined how polygenic risk scores for SCZ influenced risk-related FNC patterns. Finally, we investigated the same risk-related FNC patterns in adult SCZ patients (oSCZ) and young individuals with subclinical psychotic symptoms (PSY). Age-sensitive risk-related FNC patterns emerge during adolescence and early adulthood, but not before. Young SIB always followed older NC patterns, with decreased FNC in a cerebellar-occipitoparietal circuit and increased FNC in two prefrontal-sensorimotor circuits when compared to young NC. Two of these FNC alterations were also found in oSCZ, with one exhibiting reversed pattern. All were linked to polygenic risk for SCZ in unrelated individuals (R
2 varied from 0.02 to 0.05). Young PSY showed FNC alterations in the same direction as SIB when compared to NC. These results suggest that age-related neurotypical FNC correlates with genetic risk for SCZ and is detectable with MRI in young participants.- Published
- 2023
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10. How recent learning shapes the brain: Memory-dependent functional reconfiguration of brain circuits.
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Passiatore R, Antonucci LA, Bierstedt S, Saranathan M, Bertolino A, Suchan B, and Pergola G
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- Adult, Female, Healthy Volunteers, Humans, Male, Brain Mapping methods, Learning, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Memory, Episodic, Neural Pathways diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
The process of storing recently encoded episodic mnestic traces so that they are available for subsequent retrieval is accompanied by specific brain functional connectivity (FC) changes. In this fMRI study, we examined the early processing of memories in twenty-eight healthy participants performing an episodic memory task interposed between two resting state sessions. Memory performance was assessed through a forced-choice recognition test after the scanning sessions. We investigated resting state system configuration changes via Independent Component Analysis by cross-modeling baseline resting state spatial maps onto the post-encoding resting state, and post-encoding resting state spatial maps onto baseline. We identified both persistent and plastic components of the overall brain functional configuration between baseline and post-encoding. While FC patterns within executive, default mode, and cerebellar circuits persisted from baseline to post-encoding, FC within the visual circuit changed. A significant session × performance interaction characterized medial temporal lobe and prefrontal cortex FC with the visual circuit, as well as thalamic FC within the executive control system. Findings reveal early-stage FC changes at the system-level subsequent to a learning experience and associated with inter-individual variation in memory performance., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest Alessandro Bertolino received consulting fees by Biogen and lecture fees by Otsuka, Janssen, Lundbeck. All other authors have no biomedical financial interests and no potential conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2021. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
- Published
- 2021
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11. The interaction between cannabis use and a CB1-related polygenic co-expression index modulates dorsolateral prefrontal activity during working memory processing.
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Taurisano P, Pergola G, Monda A, Antonucci LA, Di Carlo P, Piarulli F, Passiatore R, Papalino M, Romano R, Monaco A, Rampino A, Bonvino A, Porcelli A, Popolizio T, Bellotti R, Bertolino A, and Blasi G
- Subjects
- Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Memory, Short-Term, Multifactorial Inheritance, Prefrontal Cortex, Cannabis, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention
- Abstract
Convergent findings indicate that cannabis use and variation in the cannabinoid CB1 receptor coding gene (CNR1) modulate prefrontal function during working memory (WM). Other results also suggest that cannabis modifies the physiological relationship between genetically induced expression of CNR1 and prefrontal WM processing. However, it is possible that cannabis exerts its modifying effect on prefrontal physiology by interacting with complex molecular ensembles co-regulated with CB1. Since co-regulated genes are likely co-expressed, we investigated how genetically predicted co-expression of a molecular network including CNR1 interacts with cannabis use in modulating WM processing in humans. Using post-mortem human prefrontal data, we first computed a polygenic score (CNR1-PCI), combining the effects of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) on co-expression of a cohesive gene set including CNR1, and positively correlated with such co-expression. Then, in an in vivo study, we computed CNR1-PCI in 88 cannabis users and 147 non-users and investigated its interaction with cannabis use on brain activity during WM. Results revealed an interaction between cannabis use and CNR1-PCI in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC), with a positive relationship between CNR1-PCI and DLPFC activity in cannabis users and a negative relationship in non-users. Furthermore, DLPFC activity in cannabis users was positively correlated with the frequency of cannabis use. Taken together, our results suggest that co-expression of a CNR1-related network predicts WM-related prefrontal activation as a function of cannabis use. Furthermore, they offer novel insights into the biological mechanisms associated with the use of cannabis.
- Published
- 2021
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12. The interaction between OXTR rs2268493 and perceived maternal care is associated with amygdala-dorsolateral prefrontal effective connectivity during explicit emotion processing.
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Antonucci LA, Pergola G, Passiatore R, Taurisano P, Quarto T, Dispoto E, Rampino A, Bertolino A, Cassibba R, and Blasi G
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- Adult, Amygdala diagnostic imaging, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Phenotype, Prefrontal Cortex diagnostic imaging, Young Adult, Amygdala physiology, Connectome, Emotions physiology, Facial Recognition physiology, Gene-Environment Interaction, Maternal Behavior physiology, Prefrontal Cortex physiology, Receptors, Oxytocin genetics
- Abstract
Previous studies have indicated a link between socio-emotional processing and the oxytocin receptor. In this regard, a single nucleotide polymorphism in the oxytocin receptor coding gene (OXTR rs2268493) has been linked with lower social functioning, increased risk for autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) and with post-mortem OXTR mRNA expression levels. Indeed, the levels of expression of OXTR in brain regions involved in emotion processing are also associated with maternal care. Furthermore, maternal care has been associated with emotional correlates. Taken together, these previous findings suggest a possible combined effect of rs2268493 and maternal care on emotion-related brain phenotypes. A crucial biological mechanism subtending emotional processing is the amygdala-dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) functional connection. On this basis, our aim was to investigate the interaction between rs2268493 and maternal care on amygdala-DLPFC effective connectivity during emotional evaluation. We characterized through dynamic causal modeling (DCM) patterns of amygdala-DLPFC effective connectivity during explicit emotion processing in healthy controls (HC), profiled based on maternal care and rs2268493 genotype. In the whole sample, right top-down DLPFC-to-amygdala pattern was the most likely directional model of effective connectivity. This pattern of connectivity was the most likely for all rs2268493/maternal care subgroups, except for thymine homozygous (TT)/low maternal care individuals. Here, a right bottom-up amygdala-to-DLPFC was the most likely directional model. These results suggest a gene by environment interaction mediated by the oxytocin receptor on biological phenotypes relevant to emotion processing.
- Published
- 2020
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13. Multivariate classification of schizophrenia and its familial risk based on load-dependent attentional control brain functional connectivity.
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Antonucci LA, Penzel N, Pergola G, Kambeitz-Ilankovic L, Dwyer D, Kambeitz J, Haas SS, Passiatore R, Fazio L, Caforio G, Falkai P, Blasi G, Bertolino A, and Koutsouleris N
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Male, Multivariate Analysis, Neuropsychological Tests, Risk Factors, Attention physiology, Brain diagnostic imaging, Machine Learning, Nerve Net diagnostic imaging, Schizophrenia diagnostic imaging, Schizophrenic Psychology
- Abstract
Patients with schizophrenia (SCZ), as well as their unaffected siblings (SIB), show functional connectivity (FC) alterations during performance of tasks involving attention. As compared with SCZ, these alterations are present in SIB to a lesser extent and are more pronounced during high cognitive demand, thus possibly representing one of the pathways in which familial risk is translated into the SCZ phenotype. Our aim is to measure the separability of SCZ and SIB from healthy controls (HC) using attentional control-dependent FC patterns, and to test to which extent these patterns span a continuum of neurofunctional alterations between HC and SCZ. 65 SCZ with 65 age and gender-matched HC and 39 SIB with 39 matched HC underwent the Variable Attentional Control (VAC) task. Load-dependent connectivity matrices were generated according to correct responses in each VAC load. Classification performances of high, intermediate and low VAC load FC on HC-SCZ and HC-SIB cohorts were tested through machine learning techniques within a repeated nested cross-validation framework. HC-SCZ classification models were applied to the HC-SIB cohort, and vice-versa. A high load-related decreased FC pattern discriminated between HC and SCZ with 66.9% accuracy and with 57.7% accuracy between HC and SIB. A high load-related increased FC network separated SIB from HC (69.6% accuracy), but not SCZ from HC (48.5% accuracy). Our findings revealed signatures of attentional FC abnormalities shared by SCZ and SIB individuals. We also found evidence for potential, SIB-specific FC signature, which may point to compensatory neurofunctional mechanisms in persons at familial risk for schizophrenia.
- Published
- 2020
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14. Thalamic connectivity measured with fMRI is associated with a polygenic index predicting thalamo-prefrontal gene co-expression.
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Antonucci LA, Di Carlo P, Passiatore R, Papalino M, Monda A, Amoroso N, Tangaro S, Taurisano P, Rampino A, Sambataro F, Popolizio T, Bertolino A, Pergola G, and Blasi G
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Brain Mapping, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Gene Ontology, Humans, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Middle Aged, Multifactorial Inheritance physiology, Oxygen blood, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide genetics, Young Adult, Gene Expression physiology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Neural Pathways diagnostic imaging, Prefrontal Cortex diagnostic imaging, Prefrontal Cortex physiology, Thalamus diagnostic imaging, Thalamus physiology
- Abstract
The functional connectivity between thalamic medio-dorsal nucleus (MD) and cortical regions, especially the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC), is implicated in attentional processing and is anomalous in schizophrenia, a brain disease associated with polygenic risk and attentional deficits. However, the molecular and genetic underpinnings of thalamic connectivity anomalies are unclear. Given that gene co-expression across brain areas promotes synchronous interregional activity, our aim was to investigate whether coordinated expression of genes relevant to schizophrenia in MD and DLPFC may reflect thalamic connectivity anomalies in an attention-related network including the DLPFC. With this aim, we identified in datasets of post-mortem prefrontal mRNA expression from healthy controls a gene module with robust overrepresentation of genes with coordinated MD-DLPFC expression and enriched for schizophrenia genes according to the largest genome-wide association study to date. To link this gene cluster with imaging phenotypes, we computed a Polygenic Co-Expression Index (PCI) combining single-nucleotide polymorphisms predicting module co-expression. Finally, we investigated the association between PCI and thalamic functional connectivity during attention through fMRI Independent Component Analysis in 265 healthy participants. We found that PCI was positively associated with connectivity strength of a thalamic region overlapping with the MD within an attention brain circuit. These findings identify a novel association between schizophrenia-related genes and thalamic functional connectivity. Furthermore, they highlight the association between gene expression co-regulation and brain connectivity, such that genes with coordinated MD-DLPFC expression are associated with coordinated activity between the same brain regions. We suggest that gene co-expression is a plausible mechanism underlying biological phenotypes of schizophrenia.
- Published
- 2019
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