Rare CNVs and phenome-wide profiling highlight brain structural divergence and phenotypical convergence

Copy number variations (CNVs) are rare genomic deletions and duplications that can affect brain and behaviour. Previous reports of CNV pleiotropy imply that they converge on shared mechanisms at some level of pathway cascades, from genes to large-scale neural circuits to the phenome. However, existi...

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Published inNature human behaviour Vol. 7; no. 6; pp. 1001 - 1017
Main Authors Kopal, Jakub, Kumar, Kuldeep, Saltoun, Karin, Modenato, Claudia, Moreau, Clara A., Martin-Brevet, Sandra, Huguet, Guillaume, Jean-Louis, Martineau, Martin, Charles-Olivier, Saci, Zohra, Younis, Nadine, Tamer, Petra, Douard, Elise, Maillard, Anne M., Rodriguez-Herreros, Borja, Pain, Aurèlie, Richetin, Sonia, Kushan, Leila, Silva, Ana I., van den Bree, Marianne B. M., Linden, David E. J., Owen, Michael J., Hall, Jeremy, Lippé, Sarah, Draganski, Bogdan, Sønderby, Ida E., Andreassen, Ole A., Glahn, David C., Thompson, Paul M., Bearden, Carrie E., Jacquemont, Sébastien, Bzdok, Danilo
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London Nature Publishing Group UK 01.06.2023
Nature Publishing Group
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Summary:Copy number variations (CNVs) are rare genomic deletions and duplications that can affect brain and behaviour. Previous reports of CNV pleiotropy imply that they converge on shared mechanisms at some level of pathway cascades, from genes to large-scale neural circuits to the phenome. However, existing studies have primarily examined single CNV loci in small clinical cohorts. It remains unknown, for example, how distinct CNVs escalate vulnerability for the same developmental and psychiatric disorders. Here we quantitatively dissect the associations between brain organization and behavioural differentiation across 8 key CNVs. In 534 CNV carriers, we explored CNV-specific brain morphology patterns. CNVs were characteristic of disparate morphological changes involving multiple large-scale networks. We extensively annotated these CNV-associated patterns with ~1,000 lifestyle indicators through the UK Biobank resource. The resulting phenotypic profiles largely overlap and have body-wide implications, including the cardiovascular, endocrine, skeletal and nervous systems. Our population-level investigation established brain structural divergences and phenotypical convergences of CNVs, with direct relevance to major brain disorders. Kopal and colleagues built computational bridges between rare CNVs in a clinical dataset and their deep phenotypic profiling in ~40,000 UK Biobank participants. Results show that CNVs are associated with many organ systems across the entire body.
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ISSN:2397-3374
2397-3374
DOI:10.1038/s41562-023-01541-9