Frontiers in Neuroscience (Oct 2011)
Genetic Analysis of Cortical Thickness and Fractional Anisotropy of Water Diffusion in the Brain
Abstract
ObjectivesThe thickness of the brain’s cortical gray matter (GM) and the fractional anisotropy (FA) of the cerebral white matter (WM) each follow an inverted U-shape trajectory with age. Both measures are positively correlated, suggesting a common biological mechanism. We employed bivariate genetic analyses to localize quantitative trait loci (QTLs) and individual genes acting pleiotropically upon these phenotypes.MethodsWhole-brain and regional GM thickness and FA values were measured from high-resolution anatomical (0.8mm isotropic) and diffusion tensor MR images (1.7x1.7x3.0mm, 55 directions) collected for 712 active participants (274/438 male/females, age=47.9±13.2years) in the Genetics of Brain Structure study.ResultsBivariate, whole-genome quantitative trait loci (QTL) analyses of the whole brain measures localized significant (LOD≥3.0) QTLs within chromosome region 15q22-23. More detailed localization was achieved using single nuclear polymorphism (SNP) association and gene expression analyses. No significant association (p<510-5) was observed for 1565 SNPs located within the QTLs. However, post-hoc analysis indicated that 40% of the potentially significant (p≤10-3) polymorphisms were localized to the RORA and NARG2 genes. A potentially significant association (p=310-4) was also observed for the rs2456930 polymorphism that was previously reported as a significant GWAS finding in ADNI subjects. Lymphocyte expression measurements for two genes, located under QTL, RORA and ADAM10 were significantly (p<0.05) correlated with both FA and GM thickness values. Expression measurements for NARG2 was significantly correlated with GM thickness (p<0.05) but failed to show a significant correlation (p=0.09) with FA.Discussion This study identified a novel, significant QTL at 15q22-23. SNP association and correlation with gene-expression analyses indicated that RORA, NARG2 and ADAM10 jointly influence GM thickness and cerebral WM integrity.
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