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Dissociable Cellular and Genetic Mechanisms of Cortical Thinning at Different Life Stages

Authors :
Amirhossein Modabbernia
Didac Vidal-Pineiro
Ingrid Agartz
Ole A Andreassen
Rosa Ayesa-Arriola
Alessandro Bertolino
Dorret I Boomsma
Josiane Bourque
Alan Breier
Henry Brodaty
Rachel M Brouwer
Jan K Buitelaar
Erick J Canales-Rodríguez
Xavier Caseras
Patricia J Conrod
Benedicto Crespo-Facorro
Fabrice Crivello
Eveline A Crone
Greig I de Zubicaray
Erin W Dickie
Danai Dima
Stefan Frenzel
Simon E Fisher
Barbara Franke
David C Glahn
Hans-Jörgen Grabe
Dominik Grotegerd
Oliver Gruber
Amalia Guerrero-Pedraza
Raquel E Gur
Ruben C Gur
Catharina A Hartman
Pieter J Hoekstra
Hilleke E Hulshoff Pol
Neda Jahanshad
Terry L Jernigan
Jiyang Jiang
Andrew J Kalnin
Nicole A Kochan
Bernard Mazoyer
Brenna C McDonald
Katie L McMahon
Lars Nyberg
Jaap Oosterlaan
Edith Pomarol-Clotet
Joaquim Radua
Perminder S Sachdev
Theodore D Satterthwaite
Raymond Salvador
Salvador Sarro
Andrew J Saykin
Gunter Schumann
Jordan W Smoller
Iris E Sommer
Thomas Espeseth
Sophia I Thomopoulos
Julian N Trollor
Dennis van ‘t Ent
Aristotle Voineskos
Yang Wang
Bernd Weber
Lars T Westlye
Heather C Whalley
Steven CR Williams
Katharina Wittfeld
Margaret J Wright
Paul M Thompson
Thomas Paus
Sophia Frangou
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2022.

Abstract

Mechanisms underpinning age-related variations in cortical thickness in the human brain remain poorly understood. We investigated whether inter-regional age-related variations in cortical thinning (in a multicohort neuroimaging dataset from the ENIGMA Lifespan Working Group totalling 14,248 individuals, aged 4-89 years) depended on cell-specific marker gene expression levels. We found differences amidst early-life (60 years) in the patterns of association between inter-regional profiles of cortical thickness and expression profiles of marker genes for CA1 and S1 pyramidal cells, astrocytes, and microglia. Gene ontology and enrichment analyses indicated that each of the three life-stages was associated with different biological processes and cellular components: synaptic modeling in early life, neurotransmission in mid-life, and neurodegeneration in late-life. These findings provide mechanistic insights into age-related cortical thinning during typical development and aging.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........82c3d36d46724c658fc597281640dfee