Growth factors and their receptors are important for cellular migration as well as axonal guidance and myelination in the brain. They also play a key role in programmed cell death, and are implicated in a number of mental illnesses. Recently, we reported that healthy young adults who carry the T allele variant in the growth factor gene, NTRK1 (at location rs6336), had lower white matter integrity than non-carriers on diffusion images of the brain. Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) revealed how this single nucleotide polymorphism affects white matter microstructure in human populations; DTI is also used to identify characteristic features of brain connectivity in typically developing children and in patients. Newly discovered links between neuroimaging measures and growth factors whose molecular neuroscience is well known offer an important step in understanding mechanisms that contribute to brain connectivity. Altered fiber connectivity may mediate the relationship between some genetic risk factors and a variety of mental illnesses.
How a common variant in the growth factor receptor gene, NTRK1, affects white matter
Meredith N. Braskie,N. Jahanshad,A. Toga,K. Mcmahon,G. D. de Zubicaray,N. Martin,M. Wright,P. Thompson
Published 2012 in BioArchitecture
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- Publication year
2012
- Venue
BioArchitecture
- Publication date
2012-09-01
- Fields of study
Biology, Medicine
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- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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