4.8 Article

Environmental neuroscience linking exposome to brain structure and function underlying cognition and behavior

Journal

MOLECULAR PSYCHIATRY
Volume 28, Issue 1, Pages 17-27

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41380-022-01669-6

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Individual differences in human brain structure, function, and behavior can be explained by genetic variations, environmental exposures, and their interactions. While genetic variants associated with brain imaging phenotypes have been identified, the environmental exposures related to these phenotypes are largely unknown. This study proposes that research in environmental neuroscience should focus on understanding the associations between lifetime environmental exposures and brain imaging phenotypes, as well as identifying cumulative environmental effects and their vulnerable age windows.
Individual differences in human brain structure, function, and behavior can be attributed to genetic variations, environmental exposures, and their interactions. Although genome-wide association studies have identified many genetic variants associated with brain imaging phenotypes, environmental exposures associated with these phenotypes remain largely unknown. Here, we propose that environmental neuroscience should pay more attention on exploring the associations between lifetime environmental exposures (exposome) and brain imaging phenotypes and identifying both cumulative environmental effects and their vulnerable age windows during the life course. Exposome-neuroimaging association studies face several challenges including the accurate measurement of the totality of environmental exposures varied in space and time, the highly correlated structure of the exposome, and the lack of standardized approaches for exposome-wide association studies. By agnostically scanning the effects of environmental exposures on brain imaging phenotypes and their interactions with genomic variations, exposome-neuroimaging association analyses will improve our understanding of causal factors associated with individual differences in brain structure and function as well as their relations with cognitive abilities and neuropsychiatric disorders.

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