Background/Objective. Enlarged lateral ventricle (LV) volume and decreased volume in the corpus callosum (CC) are hallmarks of schizophrenia (SZ). We previously showed an inverse correlation between LV and CC volumes in SZ, with global functioning decreasing with increased LV volume. This study investigates the relationship between LV volume, CC abnormalities, and the microRNA MIR137 and its regulated genes in SZ, because of MIR137 's essential role in neurodevelopment. Methods . Participants were 1224 SZ probands and 1466 unaffected controls from the GENUS Consortium. Brain MRI scans, genotype, and clinical data were harmonized across cohorts and employed in the analyses. Results. Increased LV volumes and decreased CC central, mid -anterior, and mid -posterior volumes were observed in SZ probands. The MIR137-regulated ephrin pathway was significantly associated with CC:LV ratio, explaining a significant proportion (3.42 %) of CC:LV variance, and more than for LV and CC separately. Other pathways explained variance in either CC or LV, but not both. CC:LV ratio was also positively correlated with Global Assessment of Functioning, supporting previous subsample findings. SNP -based heritability estimates were higher for CC central:LV ratio (0.79) compared to CC or LV separately. Discussion. Our results indicate that the CC:LV ratio is highly heritable, influenced in part by variation in the MIR137-regulated ephrin pathway. Findings suggest that the CC:LV ratio may be a risk indicator in SZ that correlates with global functioning.

MIR137 polygenic risk for schizophrenia and ephrin-regulated pathway: Role in lateral ventricles and corpus callosum volume / Blokland, G A M; Maleki, N; Jovicich, J; Mesholam-Gately, R I; Delisi, L E; Turner, J A; Shenton, M E; Voineskos, A N; Kahn, R S; Roffman, J L; Holt, D J; Ehrlich, S; Kikinis, Z; Dazzan, P; Murray, R M; Lee, J; Sim, K; Lam, M; de Zwarte, S M C; Walton, E; Kelly, S; Picchioni, M M; Bramon, E; Makris, N; David, A S; Mondelli, V; Reinders, A A T S; Oykhman, E; Morris, D W; Gill, M; Corvin, A P; Cahn, W; Ho, N; Liu, J; Gollub, R L; Manoach, D S; Calhoun, V D; Sponheim, S R; Buka, S L; Cherkerzian, S; Thermenos, H W; Dickie, E W; Ciufolini, S; Reis Marques, T; Crossley, N A; Purcell, S M; Smoller, J W; van Haren, N E M; Toulopoulou, T; Donohoe, G; Goldstein, J M; Keshavan, M S; Petryshen, T L; Del Re, E C. - In: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLINICAL AND HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY. - ISSN 1697-2600. - 24:2(2024), pp. 10045801-10045812. [10.1016/j.ijchp.2024.100458]

MIR137 polygenic risk for schizophrenia and ephrin-regulated pathway: Role in lateral ventricles and corpus callosum volume

Jovicich, J;
2024-01-01

Abstract

Background/Objective. Enlarged lateral ventricle (LV) volume and decreased volume in the corpus callosum (CC) are hallmarks of schizophrenia (SZ). We previously showed an inverse correlation between LV and CC volumes in SZ, with global functioning decreasing with increased LV volume. This study investigates the relationship between LV volume, CC abnormalities, and the microRNA MIR137 and its regulated genes in SZ, because of MIR137 's essential role in neurodevelopment. Methods . Participants were 1224 SZ probands and 1466 unaffected controls from the GENUS Consortium. Brain MRI scans, genotype, and clinical data were harmonized across cohorts and employed in the analyses. Results. Increased LV volumes and decreased CC central, mid -anterior, and mid -posterior volumes were observed in SZ probands. The MIR137-regulated ephrin pathway was significantly associated with CC:LV ratio, explaining a significant proportion (3.42 %) of CC:LV variance, and more than for LV and CC separately. Other pathways explained variance in either CC or LV, but not both. CC:LV ratio was also positively correlated with Global Assessment of Functioning, supporting previous subsample findings. SNP -based heritability estimates were higher for CC central:LV ratio (0.79) compared to CC or LV separately. Discussion. Our results indicate that the CC:LV ratio is highly heritable, influenced in part by variation in the MIR137-regulated ephrin pathway. Findings suggest that the CC:LV ratio may be a risk indicator in SZ that correlates with global functioning.
2024
2
Blokland, G A M; Maleki, N; Jovicich, J; Mesholam-Gately, R I; Delisi, L E; Turner, J A; Shenton, M E; Voineskos, A N; Kahn, R S; Roffman, J L; Holt, ...espandi
MIR137 polygenic risk for schizophrenia and ephrin-regulated pathway: Role in lateral ventricles and corpus callosum volume / Blokland, G A M; Maleki, N; Jovicich, J; Mesholam-Gately, R I; Delisi, L E; Turner, J A; Shenton, M E; Voineskos, A N; Kahn, R S; Roffman, J L; Holt, D J; Ehrlich, S; Kikinis, Z; Dazzan, P; Murray, R M; Lee, J; Sim, K; Lam, M; de Zwarte, S M C; Walton, E; Kelly, S; Picchioni, M M; Bramon, E; Makris, N; David, A S; Mondelli, V; Reinders, A A T S; Oykhman, E; Morris, D W; Gill, M; Corvin, A P; Cahn, W; Ho, N; Liu, J; Gollub, R L; Manoach, D S; Calhoun, V D; Sponheim, S R; Buka, S L; Cherkerzian, S; Thermenos, H W; Dickie, E W; Ciufolini, S; Reis Marques, T; Crossley, N A; Purcell, S M; Smoller, J W; van Haren, N E M; Toulopoulou, T; Donohoe, G; Goldstein, J M; Keshavan, M S; Petryshen, T L; Del Re, E C. - In: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLINICAL AND HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY. - ISSN 1697-2600. - 24:2(2024), pp. 10045801-10045812. [10.1016/j.ijchp.2024.100458]
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
Blokland et al, Int Jour Clin Health Psychology 2024, MIR137 polygenic risk for schizophrenia and ephrin-regulated pathway- lateral ventricle and corpus callosum volumes.pdf

accesso aperto

Tipologia: Versione editoriale (Publisher’s layout)
Licenza: Creative commons
Dimensione 1.55 MB
Formato Adobe PDF
1.55 MB Adobe PDF Visualizza/Apri

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11572/437747
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? 0
  • Scopus 0
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 0
  • OpenAlex ND
social impact