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  • Structural neuroimaging phe...
    Cazes, Jaime; Dimick, Mikaela K.; Kennedy, Kody G.; Fiksenbaum, Lisa; Zai, Clement C.; Patel, Ronak; Islam, Alvi H.; Tampakeras, Maria; Freeman, Natalie; Kennedy, James L.; MacIntosh, Bradley J.; Goldstein, Benjamin I.

    Journal of affective disorders, 06/2021, Letnik: 289
    Journal Article

    •34 genetic variants were used to create a risk score for bipolar disorder.•Risk scores were examined in relation to interaction effects on brain structure.•Risk scores were significantly different between youth BD and HC.•IL6 gene variant found to be significantly associated with youth BD.•vlPFC was identified in ROI analyses, overlapping with vertex-wise findings. Bipolar disorder (BD) is among the most heritable psychiatric disorders, particularly in early-onset cases, owing to multiple genes of small effect. Here we examine a multi-gene risk score (MGRS), to address the gap in multi-gene research in early-onset BD. MGRS was derived from 34 genetic variants relevant to neuropsychiatric diseases and related systemic processes. Multiple MGRS were calculated across a spectrum of inclusion p-value thresholds, based on allelic associations with BD. Youth participants (123 BD, 103 healthy control HC) of European descent were included, of which 101 participants (58 BD, 43 HC) underwent MRI T1-weighted structural neuroimaging. Hierarchical regressions examined for main effects and MGRS-by-diagnosis interaction effects on 6 regions-of-interest (ROIs). Vertex-wise analysis also examined MGRS-by-diagnosis interactions. MGRS based on allelic association p≤0.60 was most robust, explaining 6.8% of variance (t(226)=3.46, p=.001). There was an MGRS-by-diagnosis interaction effect on ventrolateral prefrontal cortex surface area (vlPFC; β=.21, p=.0007). Higher MGRS was associated with larger vlPFC surface area in BD vs. HC. There were 8 significant clusters in vertex-wise analyses, primarily in fronto-temporal regions, including vlPFC. Cross-sectional design, modest sample size. There was a diagnosis-by-MGRS interaction effect on vlPFC surface area, a region involved in emotional processing, emotional regulation, and reward response. Vertex-wise analysis also identified several clusters overlapping this region. This preliminary study provides an example of an approach to imaging-genetics that is intermediate between candidate gene and genome-wide association studies, enriched for genetic variants with established relevance to neuropsychiatric diseases.