运动行为、神经运动特征和积极音乐参与之间的多基因关联。

T L Henechowicz, P L Coleman, D E Gustavson, Y N Mekki, S Nayak, R Nitin, A C Scartozzi, E S Tio, R van Klei, D Felsky, M H Thaut, R L Gordon
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引用次数: 0

摘要

表型研究表明,积极参与音乐,即演奏乐器或唱歌可能对衰老时的运动衰退有保护作用。例如,音乐训练与增强的感觉运动技能有关,并伴随着大脑结构和功能的变化。虽然积极参与音乐的好处有可能“转移”到运动领域,但运动行为的遗传结构和运动系统结构也有可能影响积极参与音乐。本研究调查了从现有全基因组关联研究(GWAS)中获得的5种行为运动特征、12种神经运动结构脑特征和7种脑结构特征变化率的多基因评分(PGS)是否能预测4个独立的欧洲血统无血缘关系个体的积极音乐参与结果。N= 22198),威斯康星纵向研究(WLS;N=4,605), Vanderbilt's BioVU Repository (BioVU;N= 6150),范德比尔特在线音乐性研究(OM;N = 1559)。对结果和队列的每个PGS主要影响进行了荟萃分析,结果显示,更快的步行速度的PGS与更高数量的积极音乐参与有关。在里昂证券的研究中,走路速度的PGS值越高,听音乐的可能性越大。研究结果表明,运动功能和积极的音乐参与之间存在共同的遗传结构。未来以干预为基础的研究应该考虑运动行为的遗传基础,在整个生命周期中评估音乐参与对运动功能的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Polygenic Associations between Motor Behaviour, Neuromotor Traits, and Active Music Engagement in Four Cohorts.

Phenotypic investigations have shown that actively engaging with music, i.e., playing a musical instrument or singing may be protective of motor decline in aging. For example, music training associated with enhanced sensorimotor skills accompanied by changes in brain structure and function. Although it is possible that the benefits of active music engagement "transfer" to benefits in the motor domain, it is also possible that the genetic architecture of motor behaviour and the motor system structure may influence active music engagement. This study investigated whether polygenic scores (PGS) for five behavioural motor traits, 12 neuromotor structural brain traits, and seven rates of change in brain structure traits trained from existing discovery genome-wide association studies (GWAS) predict active music engagement outcomes in four independent cohorts of unrelated individuals of European ancestry: the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging (CLSA; N=22,198), Wisconsin Longitudinal Study (WLS; N=4,605), Vanderbilt's BioVU Repository (BioVU; N=6,150), and Vanderbilt's Online Musicality study (OM; N=1,559). Results were meta-analyzed for each PGS main effect across outcomes and cohorts, revealing that PGS for a faster walking pace was associated with higher amounts of active music engagement. Within CLSA, a higher PGS for walking pace was associated with greater odds of engaging with music. Findings suggest a shared genetic architecture between motor function and active music engagement. Future intervention-based research should consider the genetic underpinnings of motor behavior when evaluating the effects of music engagement on motor function across the lifespan.

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