Regional Homogeneity of Resting-State Brain Activity Suppresses the Effect of Dopamine-Related Genes on Sensory Processing Sensitivity

Sensory processing sensitivity (SPS) is an intrinsic personality trait whose genetic and neural bases have recently been studied. The current study used a neural mediation model to explore whether resting-state brain functions mediated the effects of dopamine-related genes on SPS. 298 healthy Chines...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2015-08, Vol.10 (8), p.e0133143-e0133143
Hauptverfasser: Chen, Chunhui, Xiu, Daiming, Chen, Chuansheng, Moyzis, Robert, Xia, Mingrui, He, Yong, Xue, Gui, Li, Jin, He, Qinghua, Lei, Xuemei, Wang, Yunxin, Liu, Bin, Chen, Wen, Zhu, Bi, Dong, Qi
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Sensory processing sensitivity (SPS) is an intrinsic personality trait whose genetic and neural bases have recently been studied. The current study used a neural mediation model to explore whether resting-state brain functions mediated the effects of dopamine-related genes on SPS. 298 healthy Chinese college students (96 males, mean age = 20.42 years, SD = 0.89) were scanned with magnetic resonance imaging during resting state, genotyped for 98 loci within the dopamine system, and administered the Highly Sensitive Person Scale. We extracted a "gene score" that summarized the genetic variations representing the 10 loci that were significantly linked to SPS, and then used path analysis to search for brain regions whose resting-state data would help explain the gene-behavior association. Mediation analysis revealed that temporal homogeneity of regional spontaneous activity (ReHo) in the precuneus actually suppressed the effect of dopamine-related genes on SPS. The path model explained 16% of the variance of SPS. This study represents the first attempt at using a multi-gene voxel-based neural mediation model to explore the complex relations among genes, brain, and personality.
ISSN:1932-6203
1932-6203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0133143