Cortical Surfaces Mediate the Relationship Between Polygenic Scores for Intelligence and General Intelligence.

Cereb Cortex
Authors
Abstract

Recent large-scale, genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified hundreds of genetic loci associated with general intelligence. The cumulative influence of these loci on brain structure is unknown. We examined if cortical morphology mediates the relationship between GWAS-derived polygenic scores for intelligence (PSi) and g-factor. Using the effect sizes from one of the largest GWAS meta-analysis on general intelligence to date, PSi were calculated among 10 P value thresholds. PSi were assessed for the association with g-factor performance, cortical thickness (CT), and surface area (SA) in two large imaging-genetics samples (IMAGEN N = 1651; IntegraMooDS N = 742). PSi explained up to 5.1% of the variance of g-factor in IMAGEN (F1,1640 = 12.2-94.3; P  0.005), and up to 3.0% in IntegraMooDS (F1,725 = 10.0-21.0; P  0.005). The association between polygenic scores and g-factor was partially mediated by SA and CT in prefrontal, anterior cingulate, insula, and medial temporal cortices in both samples (PFWER-corrected  0.005). The variance explained by mediation was up to 0.75% in IMAGEN and 0.77% in IntegraMooDS. Our results provide evidence that cumulative genetic load influences g-factor via cortical structure. The consistency of our results across samples suggests that cortex morphology could be a novel potential biomarker for neurocognitive dysfunction that is among the most intractable psychiatric symptoms.

Year of Publication
2020
Journal
Cereb Cortex
Volume
30
Issue
4
Pages
2707-2718
Date Published
2020 Apr 14
ISSN
1460-2199
DOI
10.1093/cercor/bhz270
PubMed ID
31828294
PubMed Central ID
PMC7175009
Links
Grant list
MR/N000390/1 / MRC_ / Medical Research Council / United Kingdom
MR/R00465X/1 / MRC_ / Medical Research Council / United Kingdom