Cortex mapping reveals regionally specific patterns of genetic and disease-specific gray-matter deficits in twins discordant for schizophrenia

  1. Tyrone D. Cannon*,,
  2. Paul M. Thompson,
  3. Theo G. M. van Erp*,
  4. Arthur W. Toga,
  5. Veli-Pekka Poutanen§,
  6. Matti Huttunen,
  7. Jouko Lonnqvist,
  8. Carl-Gustav Standerskjold-Nordenstam§,
  9. Katherine L. Narr,
  10. Mohammad Khaledy,
  11. Chris I. Zoumalan,
  12. Rajneesh Dail, and
  13. Jaakko Kaprio
  1. *Departments of Psychology, Psychiatry, and Human Genetics, University of California, 1285 Franz Hall, Los Angeles, CA 90095; Laboratory of Neuroimaging and Brain Mapping Division, University of California, 710 Westwood Plaza, Los Angeles, CA 90095; §Department of Radiology, Helsinki University Central Hospital, 00290, Helsinki, Finland; Department of Mental Health and Alcohol Research, National Public Health Institute, Mannerheimintie 166, 00300, Helsinki, Finland; and Department of Public Health, University of Helsinki, Mannerheimintie 172, 00014 Helsinki, Finland
  1. Communicated by P. S. Goldman-Rakic, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT (received for review October 3, 2001)

Abstract

The symptoms of schizophrenia imply disruption to brain systems supporting higher-order cognitive activity, but whether these systems are impacted differentially against a background of diffuse cortical gray-matter deficit remains ambiguous. Some unaffected first-degree relatives of schizophrenics also manifest cortical gray-matter deficits, but it is unclear whether these changes are isomorphic with those in patients, and the answer is critical to understanding the neurobiological conditions necessary for disease expression given a predisposing genotype. Here we report three-dimensional cortical surface maps (probabilistic atlases matching subjects' anatomy point by point throughout cortex) in monozygotic (MZ) and dizygotic (DZ) twins discordant for chronic schizophrenia along with demographically matched control twins. A map encoding the average differences between schizophrenia patients and their unaffected MZ co-twins revealed deficits primarily in dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, superior temporal gyrus, and superior parietal lobule. A map encoding variation associated with genetic proximity to a patient (MZ co-twins > DZ co-twins > control twins) isolated deficits primarily in polar and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. In each case, the statistical significance was confirmed through analysis of 10,000 Monte Carlo permutations, and the remaining cortex was shown to be significantly less affected by contrast analysis. The disease-related deficits in gray matter were correlated with measures of symptom severity and cognitive dysfunction but not with duration of illness or antipsychotic drug treatment. Genetic and disease-specific influences thus affect gray matter in partially nonoverlapping areas of predominantly heteromodal association cortex, changes that may act synergistically in producing overt behavioral features of the disorder.

Footnotes

  • To whom reprint requests should be addressed. E-mail: cannon{at}psych.ucla.edu.

  • Abbreviations:
    BA,
    Brodmann's areas;
    MZ,
    monozygotic;
    3D,
    three-dimensional;
    DZ,
    dizygotic
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