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Neuropsychiatric copy number variants exert shared effects on human brain structure

Authors :
Sandra Martin-Brevet
Kuldeep Kumar
Clara Moreau
M. Mallar Chakravarty
Florence Deguire
Elise Douard
Guillaume Huguet
Sarah Lippé
Carrie E. Bearden
Sébastien Jacquemont
Fanny Thébault-Dagher
Claudia Modenato
Sonia Richetin
Charlebois A
Danilo Bzdok
Côté
Bogdan Draganski
Aurélie Pain
Lester Melie-Garcia
van den Bree Mb
Ana I. Silva
Jean-Louis Martineau
Nadine Younis
Petra Tamer
Anne M. Maillard
Charles-Olivier Martin
Jeremy Hall
Michael John Owen
Leila Kushan
David E. J. Linden
Catherine Schramm
Borja Rodriguez-Herreros
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

BackgroundCopy Number Variants (CNVs) associated with autism and schizophrenia have large effects on brain anatomy. Yet, neuroimaging studies have been conducted one mutation at a time. We hypothesize that neuropsychiatric CNVs may exert general effects on brain morphometry because they confer risk for overlapping psychiatric conditions.MethodsWe analyzed T1-weighted MRIs and characterized shared patterns on brain anatomy across 8 neuropsychiatric CNVs. Clinically ascertained samples included 1q21.1 (n=48), 16p11.2 (n=156), or 22q11.2 (n=96) and 331 non-carriers. Non-clinically ascertained samples from the UK Biobank included 1q21.1 (n=19), 16p11.2 (n=8), 22q11.2 (n=9), 15q11.2 (n=148) and 965 non-carriers. Canonical correlation analysis (CCA) and univariate models were used to interrogate brain morphometry changes across 8 CNVs.ResultsEight CNVs affect regional brain volumes along two main gene-morphometry dimensions identified by CCA. While fronto-temporal regions contributed to dimension 1, dimension 2 was driven by subcortical, parietal and occipital regions. Consistently, voxel-wise whole-brain analyses identified the same regions involved in patterns of alteration present across the 4 deletions and duplications. These neuroanatomical patterns are similar to those observed in cross-psychiatric disorder meta-analyses. Deletions and duplications at all 4 loci show mirror effects at either the global and/or the regional level.ConclusionNeuropsychiatric CNVs share neuroanatomical signatures characterized by a parsimonious set of brain dimensions. The latter may underlie the risk conferred by CNVs for a similar spectrum of neuropsychiatric conditions.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....086464c3d6d0495dacfa4a98dbcc0a6a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.04.15.20056531