4.7 Article

Effects of hypogonadism on brain development during adolescence in girls with Turner syndrome

Journal

HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING
Volume 40, Issue 17, Pages 4901-4911

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/hbm.24745

Keywords

brain structural imaging; diffusion tensor imaging; gray matter volume; hypogonadism; the X chromosome; Turner syndrome; white matter connectivity

Funding

  1. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities
  2. National Science Foundation of China [81671772, 91732101, 81701783]
  3. Research Fund of PLA of China [AWS17J011]

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Gonadal steroids play an important role in brain development, particularly during puberty. Girls with Turner syndrome (TS), a genetic disorder characterized by the absence of all or part of the second X chromosome, mostly present a loss of ovarian function and estrogen deficiency, as well as neuroanatomical abnormalities. However, few studies have attempted to isolate the indirect effects of hormones from the direct genetic effects of X chromosome insufficiency. Brain structural (i.e., gray matter [GM] morphology and white matter [WM] connectivity) and functional phenotypes (i.e., resting-state functional measures) were investigated in 23 adolescent girls with TS using multimodal MRI to assess the role of hypogonadism in brain development in TS. Specifically, all girls with TS were divided into a hormonally subnormal group and an abnormal subgroup according to their serum follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) levels, with the karyotypes approximately matched between the two groups. Statistical analyses revealed significant effects of the group-by-age interaction on GM volume around the left medial orbitofrontal cortex and WM diffusion parameters around the bilateral corticospinal tract, anterior thalamic radiation, left superior longitudinal fasciculus, and cingulum bundle, but no significant group-by-age or group differences were observed in resting-state functional measures. Based on these findings, estrogen deficiency has a nontrivial impact on the development of the brain structure during adolescence in girls with TS. Our present study provides novel insights into the mechanism by which hypogonadism influences brain development during adolescence in girls with TS, and highlights the important role of estrogen replacement therapy in treating TS.

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