Beyond a Binary Classification of Sex: An Examination of Brain Sex Differentiation, Psychopathology, and Genotype.
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ABSTRACT: OBJECTIVE:Sex differences in the brain are traditionally treated as binary. We present new evidence that a continuous measure of sex differentiation of the brain can explain sex differences in psychopathology. The degree of sex-differentiated brain features (ie, features that are more common in one sex) may predispose individuals toward sex-biased psychopathology and may also be influenced by the genome. We hypothesized that individuals with a female-biased differentiation score would have greater female-biased psychopathology (internalizing symptoms, such as anxiety and depression), whereas individuals with a male-biased differentiation score would have greater male-biased psychopathology (externalizing symptoms, such as disruptive behaviors). METHOD:Using the Philadelphia Neurodevelopmental Cohort database acquired from database of Genotypes and Phenotypes, we calculated the sex differentiation measure, a continuous data-driven calculation of each individual's degree of sex-differentiating features extracted from multimodal brain imaging data (magnetic resonance imaging [MRI] /diffusion MRI) from the imaged participants (n = 866, 407 female and 459 male). RESULTS:In male individuals, higher differentiation scores were correlated with higher levels of externalizing symptoms (r = 0.119, p = .016). The differentiation measure reached genome-wide association study significance (p < 5?10-8) in male individuals with single nucleotide polymorphisms Chromsome5:rs111161632:RASGEF1C and Chromosome19:rs75918199:GEMIN7, and in female individuals with Chromosome2:rs78372132:PARD3B and Chromosome15:rs73442006:HCN4. CONCLUSION:The sex differentiation measure provides an initial topography of quantifying male and female brain features. This demonstration that the sex of the human brain can be conceptualized on a continuum has implications for both the presentation of psychopathology and the relation of the brain with genetic variants that may be associated with brain differentiation.
SUBMITTER: Phillips OR
PROVIDER: S-EPMC6456435 | biostudies-literature | 2019 Aug
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
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