4.5 Article

Neuroepigenetic impact on mentalizing in childhood

Journal

DEVELOPMENTAL COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 54, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.dcn.2022.101080

Keywords

Oxytocin; Middle childhood; FMRI; Mentalizing; Epigenetics

Funding

  1. University of Virginia
  2. UVA Brain Institute Transformative Neuroscience Pilot Grant Individual variability in the oxytocinergic system and the development of human sociality

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Mentalizing is an essential cognitive function that allows individuals to understand the mental states and intentions of others. This ability develops in childhood and is influenced by cognitive functioning, social environment, and biological factors. Through a developmental neuroimaging epigenetic approach, this study found that OXTRm levels are associated with neural responses and social skills in middle childhood.
Mentalizing, or the ability to understand the mental states and intentions of others, is an essential social cognitive function that children learn and continue to cultivate into adolescence. While most typically developing children acquire sufficient mentalizing skills, individual differences in mentalizing persist throughout childhood and are likely influenced by a combination of cognitive functioning, the social environment, and biological factors. DNA methylation of the oxytocin receptor gene (OXTRm) impacts gene expression and is associated with increased brain activity in mentalizing regions during displays of animacy in healthy young adults. The establishment, fine-tuning, and implications of such associations in the context of broader social functioning remain unclear. Using a developmental neuroimaging epigenetic approach, we investigated the contributions of OXTRm to individual variability in brain function during animate motion perception in middle childhood. We find that higher levels of OXTRm are associated with increased neural responses in the left temporo-parietal junction and inferior frontal gyrus. We also find a positive association between neural activity in LTPJ and social skills. These findings provide evidence of epigenetic influence on the developing child brain and demonstrate that variability in neural social perception in childhood is multifaceted with contributions from individual social experience and the endogenous oxytocin system.

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