Elsevier

Biological Psychiatry

Volume 86, Issue 10, 15 November 2019, Pages 779-791
Biological Psychiatry

Archival Report
Somatosensory-Motor Dysconnectivity Spans Multiple Transdiagnostic Dimensions of Psychopathology

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biopsych.2019.06.013Get rights and content
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open access

Abstract

Background

There is considerable interest in a dimensional transdiagnostic approach to psychiatry. Most transdiagnostic studies have derived factors based only on clinical symptoms, which might miss possible links between psychopathology, cognitive processes, and personality traits. Furthermore, many psychiatric studies focus on higher-order association brain networks, thereby neglecting the potential influence of huge swaths of the brain.

Methods

A multivariate data-driven approach (partial least squares) was used to identify latent components linking a large set of clinical, cognitive, and personality measures to whole-brain resting-state functional connectivity patterns across 224 participants. The participants were either healthy (n = 110) or diagnosed with bipolar disorder (n = 40), attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (n = 37), schizophrenia (n = 29), or schizoaffective disorder (n = 8). In contrast to traditional case-control analyses, the diagnostic categories were not used in the partial least squares analysis but were helpful for interpreting the components.

Results

Our analyses revealed three latent components corresponding to general psychopathology, cognitive dysfunction, and impulsivity. Each component was associated with a unique whole-brain resting-state functional connectivity signature and was shared across all participants. The components were robust across multiple control analyses and replicated using independent task functional magnetic resonance imaging data from the same participants. Strikingly, all three components featured connectivity alterations within the somatosensory-motor network and its connectivity with subcortical structures and cortical executive networks.

Conclusions

We identified three distinct dimensions with dissociable (but overlapping) whole-brain resting-state functional connectivity signatures across healthy individuals and individuals with psychiatric illness, providing potential intermediate phenotypes that span diagnostic categories. Our results suggest expanding the focus of psychiatric neuroscience beyond higher-order brain networks.

Keywords

Cognitive dysfunction
Impulsivity
Phenotypes
Psychopathology
Resting-state functional connectivity
Somatosensory-motor

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