Converging genetic and functional brain imaging evidence links neuronal excitability to working memory, psychiatric disease, and brain activity

  • Angela Heck
  • Matthias Fastenrath
  • Sandra Ackermann
  • Bianca Auschra
  • Horst Bickel
  • David Coynel
  • Leo Gschwind
  • Frank Jessen
  • Hanna Kaduszkiewicz
  • Wolfgang Maier
  • Annette Milnik
  • Michael Pentzek
  • Steffi G Riedel-Heller
  • Stephan Ripke
  • Klara Spalek
  • Patrick Sullivan
  • Christian Vogler
  • Michael Wagner
  • Siegfried Weyerer
  • Steffen Wolfsgruber
  • Dominique J-F de Quervain
  • Andreas Papassotiropoulos

Abstract

Working memory, the capacity of actively maintaining task-relevant information during a cognitive task, is a heritable trait. Working memory deficits are characteristic for many psychiatric disorders. We performed genome-wide gene set enrichment analyses in multiple independent data sets of young and aged cognitively healthy subjects (n = 2,824) and in a large schizophrenia case-control sample (n = 32,143). The voltage-gated cation channel activity gene set, consisting of genes related to neuronal excitability, was robustly linked to performance in working memory-related tasks across ages and to schizophrenia. Functional brain imaging in 707 healthy participants linked this gene set also to working memory-related activity in the parietal cortex and the cerebellum. Gene set analyses may help to dissect the molecular underpinnings of cognitive dimensions, brain activity, and psychopathology.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN0896-6273
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 05.03.2014
PubMed 24529980