Heritability of human “directed” functional connectome

Author:

Bianco Maria Giovanna1ORCID,Duggento Andrea2,Nigro Salvatore34ORCID,Conti Allegra2,Toschi Nicola25ORCID,Passamonti Luca67

Affiliation:

1. Neuroscience Research Center, Department of Medical and Surgical Sciences “Magna Graecia” University of Catanzaro Italy

2. Department of Biomedicine and Prevention University “Tor Vergata” Rome Italy

3. Institute of Nanotechnology (NANOTEC) National Research Council Lecce Italy

4. Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases and the Aging Brain, Department of Clinical Research in Neurology University of Bari 'Aldo Moro, “Pia Fondazione Cardinale G. Panico” Tricase Italy

5. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging Massachusetts General Hospital & Harvard Medical School Charlestown Boston MA 02129 USA

6. Institute of Bioimaging and Molecular Physiology National Research Council Milan Italy

7. Department of Clinical Neurosciences University of Cambridge Cambridge UK

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionThe functional connectivity patterns in the brain are highly heritable; however, it is unclear how genetic factors influence the directionality of such “information flows.” Studying the “directionality” of the brain functional connectivity and assessing how heritability modulates it can improve our understanding of the human connectome.MethodsHere, we investigated the heritability of “directed” functional connections using a state‐space formulation of Granger causality (GC), in conjunction with blind deconvolution methods accounting for local variability in the hemodynamic response function. Such GC implementation is ideal to explore the directionality of functional interactions across a large number of networks. Resting‐state functional magnetic resonance imaging data were drawn from the Human Connectome Project (total n = 898 participants). To add robustness to our findings, the dataset was randomly split into a “discovery” and a “replication” sample (each with n = 449 participants). The two cohorts were carefully matched in terms of demographic variables and other confounding factors (e.g., education). The effect of shared environment was also modeled.ResultsThe parieto‐ and prefronto‐cerebellar, parieto‐prefrontal, and posterior‐cingulate to hippocampus connections showed the highest and most replicable heritability effects with little influence by shared environment. In contrast, shared environmental factors significantly affected the visuo‐parietal and sensory‐motor directed connectivity.ConclusionWe suggest a robust role of heritability in influencing the directed connectivity of some cortico‐subcortical circuits implicated in cognition. Further studies, for example using task‐based fMRI and GC, are warranted to confirm the asymmetric effects of genetic factors on the functional connectivity within cognitive networks and their role in supporting executive functions and learning.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience

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