The Speed of Development of Adolescent Brain Age Depends on Sex and Is Genetically Determined

Publication date

2021-01-05

Authors

Brouwer, Rachel MISNI 0000000389353779
Schutte, Jelle
Janssen, Ronald
Boomsma, Dorret I
Pol, Hilleke E HulshoffORCID 0000-0002-2038-5281ISNI 000000035942330X
Schnack, H.ISNI 000000038897037X

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Abstract

Children and adolescents show high variability in brain development. Brain age-the estimated biological age of an individual brain-can be used to index developmental stage. In a longitudinal sample of adolescents (age 9-23 years), including monozygotic and dizygotic twins and their siblings, structural magnetic resonance imaging scans (N = 673) at 3 time points were acquired. Using brain morphology data of different types and at different spatial scales, brain age predictors were trained and validated. Differences in brain age between males and females were assessed and the heritability of individual variation in brain age gaps was calculated. On average, females were ahead of males by at most 1 year, but similar aging patterns were found for both sexes. The difference between brain age and chronological age was heritable, as was the change in brain age gap over time. In conclusion, females and males show similar developmental ("aging") patterns but, on average, females pass through this development earlier. Reliable brain age predictors may be used to detect (extreme) deviations in developmental state of the brain early, possibly indicating aberrant development as a sign of risk of neurodevelopmental disorders.

Keywords

brain age, heritability, longitudinal imaging, sex differences, structural brain development, Cognitive Neuroscience, Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience

Citation

Brouwer, R M, Schutte, J, Janssen, R, Boomsma, D I, Hulshoff Pol, H E & Schnack, H G 2021, 'The Speed of Development of Adolescent Brain Age Depends on Sex and Is Genetically Determined', Cerebral Cortex, vol. 31, no. 2, pp. 1296-1306. https://doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhaa296