2016
DOI: 10.3389/fnsys.2016.00093
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The Inverse Relationship between the Microstructural Variability of Amygdala-Prefrontal Pathways and Trait Anxiety Is Moderated by Sex

Abstract: Anxiety impacts the quality of everyday life and may facilitate the development of affective disorders, possibly through concurrent alterations in neural circuitry. Findings from multimodal neuroimaging studies suggest that trait-anxious individuals may have a reduced capacity for efficient communication between the amygdala and the ventral prefrontal cortex (vPFC). A diffusion-weighted imaging protocol with 61 directions was used to identify lateral and medial amygdala-vPFC white matter pathways. The structur… Show more

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Cited by 25 publications
(31 citation statements)
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References 70 publications
(93 reference statements)
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“…Using a large multimodal dataset from the Duke Neurogenetics Study, we demonstrate that the expression of trait anxiety as a function of the microstructural integrity of a prominent pathway linking the amygdala and vPFC is moderated by sex and a functional genetic polymorphism associated with neuroplasticity. Replicating our prior work 13 , we found an inverse correlation between amygdala-vPFC FA values and self-reported trait anxiety in women but not men. Furthermore, we demonstrate that this association in women is specific to Met allele carriers of BDNF rs6265, which is associated with impaired activity-dependent plasticity as well as multiple anxiety-related phenotypes including impoverished fear extinction.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 88%
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“…Using a large multimodal dataset from the Duke Neurogenetics Study, we demonstrate that the expression of trait anxiety as a function of the microstructural integrity of a prominent pathway linking the amygdala and vPFC is moderated by sex and a functional genetic polymorphism associated with neuroplasticity. Replicating our prior work 13 , we found an inverse correlation between amygdala-vPFC FA values and self-reported trait anxiety in women but not men. Furthermore, we demonstrate that this association in women is specific to Met allele carriers of BDNF rs6265, which is associated with impaired activity-dependent plasticity as well as multiple anxiety-related phenotypes including impoverished fear extinction.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 88%
“…While the exact nature of the sex-specific association between amygdala-vPFC and trait anxiety remains to be determined, it is likely that both psychosocial (e.g., some young men may be more reluctant than women to report their own levels of trait anxiety 31 ) and biological (e.g., prenatal stress may lead to increased anxiety-like behaviors in female versus male rats 32 ) mechanisms contribute to the observed differences between men and women. We do note that these particular sex differences in dMRI studies of brain-anxiety associations have emerged only recently 13 , and that not all previous studies reporting an inverse correlation between trait anxiety and amygdala-vPFC structural connectivity observed moderating effects of sex 12 , 14 . Regardless, the current findings from our large sample, which had better power to detect small effects than any prior work, along with previously reported sex-specific effects buttress the link between trait anxiety and the structural connectivity of the amygdala-vPFC pathways in women but not men.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 62%
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