학술논문

The Genetic Contributions to Maturational Coupling in the Human Cerebrum: A Longitudinal Pediatric Twin Imaging Study.
Document Type
article
Source
Cerebral Cortex. 28(9)
Subject
Pediatric
Brain Disorders
Neurosciences
Genetics
Mental Health
Clinical Research
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Cerebral Cortex
Child
Female
Humans
Longitudinal Studies
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Male
Neurogenesis
cortical thickness
genetics
MRI
neurodevelopment
twin research
Psychology
Cognitive Sciences
Experimental Psychology
Language
Abstract
Although prior studies have demonstrated that genetic factors play the dominant role in the patterning of the pediatric brain, it remains unclear how these patterns change over time. Using 1748 longitudinal anatomic MRI scans from 792 healthy twins and siblings, we quantified how genetically mediated inter-regional associations change over time via multivariate longitudinal structural equation modeling. These analyses found that genetic correlations for both lobar volumes and cortical thickness are dynamic, with relatively static effects on surface area. While genetic correlations for lobar volumes decrease over childhood and adolescence, in general they increase for cortical thickness in the second decade of life. Quantification of how genetic factors influence maturational coupling improves our understanding of typical neurodevelopment and informs future molecular genetic analyses.