Shared and unique heritability of hippocampal subregion volumes in children and adults

Jacob G. Pine, Washington University in St. Louis
Arpana Agrawal, Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis
Ryan Bogdan, Washington University in St. Louis
Sridhar Kandala, Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis
Shelly Cooper, Washington University in St. Louis
Deanna M Barch, Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis

Abstract

Behavioral genetic analyses have not demonstrated robust, unique, genetic correlates of hippocampal subregion volume. Genetic differentiation of hippocampal longitudinal axis subregion volume has not yet been investigated in population-based samples, although this has been demonstrated in rodent and post-mortem human tissue work. The following study is the first population-based investigation of genetic factors that contribute to gray matter volume along the hippocampal longitudinal axis. Twin-based biometric analyses demonstrated that longitudinal axis subregions are associated with significant, unique, genetic variance, and that longitudinal axis subregions are also associated with significant shared, hippocampus-general, genetic factors. Our study's findings suggest that genetic differences in hippocampal longitudinal axis structure can be detected in individual differences in gray matter volume in population-level research designs.