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Integrative structural, functional, and transcriptomic analyses of sex-biased brain organization in humans

Siyuan Liu, Jakob Seidlitz, Jonathan D. Blumenthal, Liv Clasen, Armin Raznahan

2020Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences228 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

> 0.8 within and across cohorts). Relative GMV is female biased in prefrontal and superior parietal cortices, and male biased in ventral occipitotemporal, and distributed subcortical regions. Second, through systematic comparison with functional neuroimaging meta-analyses, we establish a statistically significant concentration of human GMV sex differences within brain regions that subserve face processing. Finally, by imaging-transcriptomic analyses, we show that GMV sex differences in human adulthood are specifically and significantly coupled to regional expression of sex-chromosome (vs. autosomal) genes and enriched for distinct cell-type signatures. These findings establish conserved aspects of sex-biased brain development in humans and mice, and shed light on the consistency, candidate causes, and potential functional corollaries of sex-biased brain anatomy in humans.

Topics & Concepts

TranscriptomeNeuroimagingTestis determining factorHuman brainSex characteristicsPsychologySexual differentiationBiologyBrain sizeConsistency (knowledge bases)CognitionNeuroscienceGeneGeneticsGene expressionY chromosomeMedicineArtificial intelligenceComputer scienceMagnetic resonance imagingRadiologyGenetic Associations and EpidemiologySex and Gender in HealthcareCognitive Abilities and Testing
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