Center for Interdisciplinary Brain Sciences Research, Stanford, California 94305, Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Francisco, California 94143, Department of Bioengineering, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305, Division of Pediatric Endocrinology, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19107, and Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences and Department of Radiology, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305.
J Neurosci. 2014 Mar 5;34(10):3509-16. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2790-13.2014.
Studies of sex effects on neurodevelopment have traditionally focused on animal models investigating hormonal influences on brain anatomy. However, more recent evidence suggests that sex chromosomes may also have direct upstream effects that act independently of hormones. Sex chromosome aneuploidies provide ideal models to examine this framework in humans, including Turner syndrome (TS), where females are missing one X-chromosome (45X), and Klinefelter syndrome (KS), where males have an additional X-chromosome (47XXY). As these disorders essentially represent copy number variants of the sex chromosomes, investigation of brain structure across these disorders allows us to determine whether sex chromosome gene dosage effects exist. We used voxel-based morphometry to investigate this hypothesis in a large sample of children in early puberty, to compare regional gray matter volumes among individuals with one (45X), two (typically developing 46XX females and 46XY males), and three (47XXY) sex chromosomes. Between-group contrasts of TS and KS groups relative to respective sex-matched controls demonstrated highly convergent patterns of volumetric differences with the presence of an additional sex chromosome being associated with relatively decreased parieto-occipital gray matter volume and relatively increased temporo-insular gray matter volumes. Furthermore, z-score map comparisons between TS and KS cohorts also suggested that this effect occurs in a linear dose-dependent fashion. We infer that sex chromosome gene expression directly influences brain structure in children during early stages of puberty, extending our understanding of genotype-phenotype mechanisms underlying sex differences in the brain.
关于性别的神经发育影响的研究传统上集中在动物模型上,研究激素对大脑解剖结构的影响。然而,最近的证据表明,性染色体也可能有直接的上游效应,独立于激素发挥作用。性染色体非整倍体为在人类中研究这一框架提供了理想的模型,包括特纳综合征(TS),女性缺失一条 X 染色体(45X),和克氏综合征(KS),男性有一条额外的 X 染色体(47XXY)。由于这些疾病本质上代表性染色体的拷贝数变异,因此研究这些疾病中的大脑结构可以确定是否存在性染色体基因剂量效应。我们使用基于体素的形态计量学方法在青春期早期的大量儿童中研究了这一假说,以比较具有一条(45X)、两条(通常发育的 46XX 女性和 46XY 男性)和三条(47XXY)性染色体的个体之间的区域性灰质体积。与各自性别匹配的对照组相比,TS 和 KS 组之间的组间对比显示出体积差异的高度趋同模式,存在额外的性染色体与相对减少的顶枕叶灰质体积和相对增加的颞岛叶灰质体积相关。此外,TS 和 KS 队列之间的 z 分数图比较还表明,这种效应以线性剂量依赖的方式发生。我们推断,性染色体基因表达直接影响青春期早期儿童的大脑结构,扩展了我们对大脑性别差异的基因型-表型机制的理解。