Structural connectome architecture shapes the maturation of cortical morphology from childhood to adolescence.
Xinyuan LiangLianglong SunXuhong LiaoTianyuan LeiMingrui XiaDingna DuanZilong ZengQiongling LiZhilei XuWeiwei MenYanpei WangShuping TanJia-Hong GaoShaozheng QinSha TaoQi DongTengda ZhaoYong HePublished in: Nature communications (2024)
Cortical thinning is an important hallmark of the maturation of brain morphology during childhood and adolescence. However, the connectome-based wiring mechanism that underlies cortical maturation remains unclear. Here, we show cortical thinning patterns primarily located in the lateral frontal and parietal heteromodal nodes during childhood and adolescence, which are structurally constrained by white matter network architecture and are particularly represented using a network-based diffusion model. Furthermore, connectome-based constraints are regionally heterogeneous, with the largest constraints residing in frontoparietal nodes, and are associated with gene expression signatures of microstructural neurodevelopmental events. These results are highly reproducible in another independent dataset. These findings advance our understanding of network-level mechanisms and the associated genetic basis that underlies the maturational process of cortical morphology during childhood and adolescence.
Keyphrases
- white matter
- depressive symptoms
- gene expression
- resting state
- functional connectivity
- early life
- childhood cancer
- dna methylation
- working memory
- genome wide
- multiple sclerosis
- sentinel lymph node
- squamous cell carcinoma
- young adults
- early stage
- radiation therapy
- minimally invasive
- lymph node
- network analysis
- rectal cancer
- subarachnoid hemorrhage