4.8 Article

Shared heritability of human face and brain shape

Journal

NATURE GENETICS
Volume 53, Issue 6, Pages 830-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41588-021-00827-w

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  2. Lorry Lokey endowed professorship
  3. Stinehart Reed award
  4. Helen Hay Whitney Fellowship
  5. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [1-R01-DE027023, 2-R01-DE027023]
  6. Research Fund KU Leuven [BOF-C1, C14/15/081, C14/20/081]
  7. Research Program of the Research Foundation in Flanders (FWO) [G078518N]
  8. FWO
  9. Flemish Government (department EWI)
  10. NIH [5T32HG000044-23, HG008140, HG009431, 5R01-DA033431-07, U01DA041022, U01DA041028, U01DA041048, U01DA041089, U01DA041106, U01DA041117, U01DA041120, U01DA041134, U01DA041148, U01DA041156, U01DA041174, U24DA041123, U24DA041147, U01DA041093, U01DA041025]
  11. National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research [U01-DE020078, R01-DE016148, R01-DE027023]
  12. National Human Genome Research Institute [X01-HG007821, X01-HG007485]
  13. National Institute for Dental and Craniofacial Research [HHSN268201200008I]
  14. National Science Foundation [1922598]
  15. NIH
  16. Division Of Graduate Education
  17. Direct For Education and Human Resources [1922598] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

Ask authors/readers for more resources

A multivariate genome-wide association study has identified shared developmental axes between face and brain shaping each other during early embryogenesis. However, this interaction does not seem to impact later brain development related to cognitive function.
Evidence from model organisms and clinical genetics suggests coordination between the developing brain and face, but the role of this link in common genetic variation remains unknown. We performed a multivariate genome-wide association study of cortical surface morphology in 19,644 individuals of European ancestry, identifying 472 genomic loci influencing brain shape, of which 76 are also linked to face shape. Shared loci include transcription factors involved in craniofacial development, as well as members of signaling pathways implicated in brain-face cross-talk. Brain shape heritability is equivalently enriched near regulatory regions active in either forebrain organoids or facial progenitors. However, we do not detect significant overlap between shared brain-face genome-wide association study signals and variants affecting behavioral-cognitive traits. These results suggest that early in embryogenesis, the face and brain mutually shape each other through both structural effects and paracrine signaling, but this interplay may not impact later brain development associated with cognitive function. A multivariate genome-wide association study highlighting loci that influence both face and brain shape suggesting shared developmental axes during early embryogenesis. These loci did not overlap with those governing behavioral-cognitive traits or neuropsychiatric risk indicating divergence between early brain development and cognitive function.

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