| Literature DB >> 25747917 |
Peter Kochunov1, Neda Jahanshad2, Daniel Marcus3, Anderson Winkler4, Emma Sprooten5, Thomas E Nichols6, Susan N Wright7, L Elliot Hong7, Binish Patel7, Timothy Behrens4, Saad Jbabdi4, Jesper Andersson4, Christophe Lenglet8, Essa Yacoub8, Steen Moeller8, Eddie Auerbach8, Kamil Ugurbil8, Stamatios N Sotiropoulos4, Rachel M Brouwer9, Bennett Landman10, Hervé Lemaitre11, Anouk den Braber12, Marcel P Zwiers13, Stuart Ritchie14, Kimm van Hulzen13, Laura Almasy15, Joanne Curran15, Greig I deZubicaray16, Ravi Duggirala15, Peter Fox17, Nicholas G Martin18, Katie L McMahon16, Braxton Mitchell19, Rene L Olvera17, Charles Peterson15, John Starr14, Jessika Sussmann14, Joanna Wardlaw14, Margie Wright18, Dorret I Boomsma12, Rene Kahn9, Eco J C de Geus12, Douglas E Williamson17, Ahmad Hariri20, Dennis van 't Ent12, Mark E Bastin14, Andrew McIntosh14, Ian J Deary14, Hilleke E Hulshoff Pol9, John Blangero15, Paul M Thompson2, David C Glahn5, David C Van Essen21.
Abstract
The degree to which genetic factors influence brain connectivity is beginning to be understood. Large-scale efforts are underway to map the profile of genetic effects in various brain regions. The NIH-funded Human Connectome Project (HCP) is providing data valuable for analyzing the degree of genetic influence underlying brain connectivity revealed by state-of-the-art neuroimaging methods. We calculated the heritability of the fractional anisotropy (FA) measure derived from diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) reconstruction in 481 HCP subjects (194/287 M/F) consisting of 57/60 pairs of mono- and dizygotic twins, and 246 siblings. FA measurements were derived using (Enhancing NeuroImaging Genetics through Meta-Analysis) ENIGMA DTI protocols and heritability estimates were calculated using the SOLAR-Eclipse imaging genetic analysis package. We compared heritability estimates derived from HCP data to those publicly available through the ENIGMA-DTI consortium, which were pooled together from five-family based studies across the US, Europe, and Australia. FA measurements from the HCP cohort for eleven major white matter tracts were highly heritable (h(2)=0.53-0.90, p<10(-5)), and were significantly correlated with the joint-analytical estimates from the ENIGMA cohort on the tract and voxel-wise levels. The similarity in regional heritability suggests that the additive genetic contribution to white matter microstructure is consistent across populations and imaging acquisition parameters. It also suggests that the overarching genetic influence provides an opportunity to define a common genetic search space for future gene-discovery studies. Uniquely, the measurements of additive genetic contribution performed in this study can be repeated using online genetic analysis tools provided by the HCP ConnectomeDB web application.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25747917 PMCID: PMC4387079 DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2015.02.050
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuroimage ISSN: 1053-8119 Impact factor: 6.556