| Literature DB >> 22840435 |
Emma Sprooten1, Andrew M McIntosh, Stephen M Lawrie, Jeremy Hall, Jess E Sussmann, Norbert Dahmen, Andreas Konrad, Mark E Bastin, Georg Winterer.
Abstract
ZNF804A, a genomewide supported susceptibility gene for schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, has been associated with task-independent functional connectivity between the left and right dorsolateral prefrontal cortices. Several lines of evidence have converged on the hypothesis that this effect may be mediated by structural connectivity. We tested this hypothesis using diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging in three samples: one German sample of 50 healthy individuals, one Scottish sample of 83 healthy individuals and one Scottish sample of 84 unaffected relatives of bipolar patients. Voxel-based analysis and tract-based spatial statistics did not detect any fractional anisotropy (FA) differences between minor allele carriers and individuals homozygous for the major allele at rs1344706. Similarly, region-of-interest analyses and quantitative tractography of the genu of the corpus callosum revealed no significant FA differences between the genotype groups. Examination of effect sizes and confidence intervals indicated that this negative finding is very unlikely to be due to a lack of statistical power. In summary, despite using various analysis techniques in three different samples, our results were strikingly and consistently negative. These data therefore suggest that it is unlikely that the effects of genetic variation at rs1344706 on functional connectivity are mediated by structural integrity differences in large, long-range white matter fiber connections.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22840435 PMCID: PMC3778890 DOI: 10.1016/j.mri.2012.05.013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Magn Reson Imaging ISSN: 0730-725X Impact factor: 2.546
Demographic characteristics of the three samples
| rs1344706 | German sample | Scottish control sample | Scottish high-risk sample | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AA | AC+CC | AA | AC+CC | AA | AC+CC | ||||
| 19 | 24+7 | 31 | 39+13 | 37 | 36+11 | ||||
| Age (years) | 23.1±1.2 | 22.5±2 | .20 | 21.8±2.3 | 20.7±2.4 | .03 | 21.4±2.8 | 21.4±2.8 | .94 |
| Sex (M/F) | 9/10 | 16/15 | .78 | 14/17 | 23/29 | .93 | 17/20 | 22/25 | .94 |
| IQ | 117.9±8 | 117.3±12.5 | .91 | 111.7±11.9 | 112.2±13.1 | .84 | 108.0±13.9 | 104.6±14.4 | .28 |
Fig. 1ZNF804A effect sizes on FA in the anterior corpus callosum in the Scottish samples. Ninety-five percent confidence intervals around mean genotype group differences in the PNT and ROI analyses in the Scottish samples. HC=healthy control group, HR=high-risk group, ROI=region of interest of genu & body of corpus callosum. Note that typical effect sizes for FA range between 0.05 and 0.10 FA units, which lie comfortably outside the range of the 95% confidence intervals of our comparisons.