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  Interaction of developmental factors and ordinary stressful life events on brain structure in adults

Ringwald, K. G., Meller, T., Schmitt, S., Andlauer, T. F. M., Stein, F., Brosch, K., et al. (2021). Interaction of developmental factors and ordinary stressful life events on brain structure in adults. NEUROIMAGE-CLINICAL, 30: 102683. doi:10.1016/j.nicl.2021.102683.

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 Creators:
Ringwald, Kai G., Author
Meller, Tina, Author
Schmitt, Simon, Author
Andlauer, Till F. M., Author
Stein, Frederike, Author
Brosch, Katharina, Author
Pfarr, Julia-Katharina, Author
Steinstraeter, Olaf, Author
Meinert, Susanne, Author
Lemke, Hannah, Author
Waltemate, Lena, Author
Thiel, Katharina, Author
Grotegerd, Dominik, Author
Enneking, Verena, Author
Klug, Melissa, Author
Jansen, Andreas, Author
Forstner, Andreas J., Author
Streit, Fabian, Author
Witt, Stephanie H., Author
Rietschel, Marcella, Author
Mueller-Myhsok, Bertram1, Author           Noethen, Markus M., AuthorDannlowski, Udo, AuthorKrug, Axel, AuthorNenadic, Igor, AuthorKircher, Tilo, Author more..
Affiliations:
1RG Statistical Genetics, Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry, Max Planck Society, ou_2040288              

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 Abstract: An interplay of early environmental and genetic risk factors with recent stressful life events (SLEs) in adulthood increases the risk for adverse mental health outcomes. The interaction of early risk and current SLEs on brain structure has hardly been investigated.
Whole brain voxel-based morphometry analysis was performed in N = 786 (64.6% female, mean age = 33.39) healthy subjects to identify correlations of brain clusters with commonplace recent SLEs. Genetic and early environmental risk factors, operationalized as those for severe psychopathology (i.e., polygenic scores for neuroticism, childhood maltreatment, urban upbringing and paternal age) were assessed as modulators of the impact of SLEs on the brain.
SLEs were negatively correlated with grey matter volume in the left medial orbitofrontal cortex (mOFC, FWE p = 0.003). This association was present for both, positive and negative, life events. Cognitive-emotional variables, i.e., neuroticism, perceived stress, trait anxiety, intelligence, and current depressive symptoms did not account for the SLE-mOFC association. Further, genetic and environmental risk factors were not correlated with grey matter volume in the left mOFC cluster and did not affect the association between SLEs and left mOFC grey matter volume.
The orbitofrontal cortex has been implicated in stress-related psychopathology, particularly major depression in previous studies. We find that SLEs are associated with this area. Important early life risk factors do not interact with current SLEs on brain morphology in healthy subjects.

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 Dates: 2021
 Publication Status: Published online
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Title: NEUROIMAGE-CLINICAL
Source Genre: Journal
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Pages: - Volume / Issue: 30 Sequence Number: 102683 Start / End Page: - Identifier: ISSN: 2213-1582