| Literature DB >> 35113692 |
Carolina Makowski1, Dennis van der Meer2,3, Weixiu Dong4, Hao Wang1, Yan Wu4, Jingjing Zou5, Cin Liu1, Sara B Rosenthal6, Donald J Hagler1, Chun Chieh Fan1, William S Kremen7, Ole A Andreassen2, Terry L Jernigan8, Anders M Dale1,2, Kun Zhang4, Peter M Visscher9, Jian Yang9,10, Chi-Hua Chen1.
Abstract
To determine the impact of genetic variants on the brain, we used genetically informed brain atlases in genome-wide association studies of regional cortical surface area and thickness in 39,898 adults and 9136 children. We uncovered 440 genome-wide significant loci in the discovery cohort and 800 from a post hoc combined meta-analysis. Loci in adulthood were largely captured in childhood, showing signatures of negative selection, and were linked to early neurodevelopment and pathways associated with neuropsychiatric risk. Opposing gradations of decreased surface area and increased thickness were associated with common inversion polymorphisms. Inferior frontal regions, encompassing Broca's area, which is important for speech, were enriched for human-specific genomic elements. Thus, a mixed genetic landscape of conserved and human-specific features is concordant with brain hierarchy and morphogenetic gradients.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35113692 PMCID: PMC9469470 DOI: 10.1126/science.abe8457
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 63.714