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From: David Grosof
To: "jeevacation®gmail.com" <jeevacation®gmail.com>
Subject: Genetics of brain size variation
Date: Mon, 24 Aug 2009 23:54:36 +0000
Genetic variations lied to brain size for first time
Posted In: R&D Daily I Biotechnology I Medical Imaging I Nanomedicine
By Mark Schrope
Monday, August 24, 2009
Using advanced brain imaging and genomics technologies, an international team of researchers co-led by Scripps
Research Institute scientists has shown for the first time that natural variations in a specific gene influence brain
structure. By establishing this link, the researchers have opened the door to a range of potential research efforts
that could reveal gene variations responsible for a number of neurological conditions such as autism.
The work was reported in an advance, online Early Edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences (PNAS) the week of August 17, 2009.
The research grew out of a larger project called the Thematic Organized Psychosis (TOP) study, led by Ole
Andreassen at Ullelval University Hospital and Institute of Psychiatry at the University of Oslo in Norway. TOP
called for using extensive magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanning of hundreds of patients, including many
with severe mental disorders, in collaboration with Anders Dale of the University of California, San Diego
(UCSD), School of Medicine. Recognizing the potential of genetic studies conducted in conjunction with the
braining imaging, the team reached out to include Nicholas Schork, a genetics expert at Scripps Research.
In deciding a first target, the group decided to focus on a gene known as MECP2 because it plays major roles in
controlling brain development. Past studies with mice have shown that MECP2 regulates the activity of a wide
range of other genes important in brain development. Substantial mutations in the gene also cause the rare
disease Retts syndrome, in which brain growth slows, leading to a range of debilitating neurological problems
and mental retardation. MECP2 has also been linked to autism.
Given its obvious import, says Schork, "This was a logical gene to target."
Making the Connection
In the new research, the team explored whether common variations likely to have small effects individually in
the MECP2 and surrounding region in the DNA of patients could be tied directly to the way a patient's brain
develops. They found that indeed some of these variations, known as single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs),
did correlate well with various measures of a patient's brain, though there was no identifiable tie between the
variations and the mental disorders.
The closest connection they found was between two specific SNPs and lower surface area folds of the outer
layer, or cortex, of the brainthe "grey matter," which plays critical roles in thinking, language, memory, and other
functions. "So, those sorts of common variations actually do have some functional consequences that are
dictating variations in brain size," says Schork. Interestingly, and for reasons not yet clear, the pattern was only
seen in males.
With the direct correlation reliably identified in the patients from the TOP study, the research team then needed
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to show its findings were not a fluke. This proved a challenging task, because the extensive brain imaging used
for TOPsand essential for finding the SNP-cortical area correlationsis not commonly used. The researchers
finally found what they needed in another study already under way called the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging
Initiative (ADNI), an ongoing public-private project supported primarily by the National Institutes of Health
(NIH) with pharmaceutical and related industries and not-for-profit organizations providing support.
The researchers then set to work examining the MECP2 variations in the hundreds of patients involved in that
study. "Lo and behold, it replicated," says Schork. The very same connection was found between the two SNPs
and the lower cortical area, providing confidence that the correlation is quite real. Again, no tie was spotted
between brain structure and disorder, in this case Alzheimer's disease.
No such correlation has ever before been established between natural genetic variations and brain volume.
Though brain size has long been tied to various neurological conditions, defining such connections has been
difficult, in part because of previous limitations in brain imaging technologies and techniques.
Expanding the Search
Schork and the rest of the team are now excited about the potential for additional related work. Because MECP2
has been linked to autism, there is a very real possibility that studying SNPs in autistic patients might reveal one
or more that link to brain development problems. This could even illuminate possible paths for autism
treatments. The group is also looking at possible connections between variations in other key genes and various
brain regions.
Besides overall brain size, researchers believe that some neurological conditions might be tied to increases in the
size of certain brain components, perhaps due to unidentified genetic mutations. This could prevent other
components from growing to their full size due to the limited space inside a skull, preventing proper functioning.
"Who knows?" asks Schork, "This opens things up considerably. Now we can cast a much wider net and maybe
rope in genes nobody had a clue about and discover something that otherwise wouldn't have been known."
Other authors of the paper, titled "A common MECP2 haplotype associates with reduced cortical surface area in
humans in two independent populations," include first author Alexander Joyner, a UCSD graduate student and
Scripps Research Scholar; Cinnamon Bloss, Trygve Bakken, and Eric Topol, from Scripps Research; Cooper
Roddey and Anders Dale, from UCSD; and Lars Rimol, Ingrid Melle, Ingrid Agartz, Srdjan Djurovic from the
University of Oslo.
The Scripps Research portion of this project was funded by the NIH.
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