Cortical development coupling between surface area and sulcal depth on macaque brains

被引:3
|
作者
Li, Xiao [1 ]
Zhang, Songyao [1 ]
Jiang, Xi [2 ]
Zhang, Shu [3 ]
Han, Junwei [1 ]
Guo, Lei [1 ]
Zhang, Tuo [1 ]
机构
[1] Northwestern Polytech Univ, Sch Automat, Xian, Peoples R China
[2] Univ Elect Sci & Technol China, Sch Life Sci & Technol, Chengdu, Peoples R China
[3] Northwestern Polytech Univ, Sch Comp Sci, Xian, Peoples R China
来源
BRAIN STRUCTURE & FUNCTION | 2022年 / 227卷 / 03期
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
Cortical development; Surface area; Sulcal depth; Macaque monkey; Longitudinal study; NERVOUS-SYSTEM MYELINATION; WHITE-MATTER DEVELOPMENT; AGE-RELATED-CHANGES; HUMAN FETAL-BRAIN; CEREBRAL-CORTEX; LONGITUDINAL DEVELOPMENT; NEURONAL MIGRATION; TANGENTIAL EXPANSION; SPATIAL-DISTRIBUTION; GROWTH TRAJECTORIES;
D O I
10.1007/s00429-021-02444-z
中图分类号
R602 [外科病理学、解剖学]; R32 [人体形态学];
学科分类号
100101 ;
摘要
Postnatal development of cerebral cortex is associated with a variety of neuronal processes and is thus critical to development of brain function and cognition. Longitudinal changes of cortical morphology and topology, such as postnatal cortical thinning and flattening have been widely studied. However, thorough and systematic investigation of such cortical change, including how to quantify it from multiple spatial directions and how to relate it to surface topology, is rarely found. In this work, based on a longitudinal macaque neuroimaging dataset, we quantified local changes in gyral white matter's surface area and sulcal depth during early development. We also investigated how these two metrics are coupled and how this coupling is linked to cortical surface topology, underlying white matter, and positions of functional areas. Semi-parametric generalized additive models were adopted to quantify the longitudinal changes of surface area (A) and sulcal depth (D), and the coupling patterns between them. This resulted in four classes of regions, according to how they change compared with global change throughout early development: slower surface area change and slower sulcal depth change (slowA_slowD), slower surface area change and faster sulcal depth change (slowA_fastD), faster surface area change and slower sulcal depth change (fastA_slowD), and faster surface area change and faster sulcal depth change (fastA_fastD). We found that cortex-related metrics, including folding pattern and cortical thickness, vary along slowA_fastD-fastA_slowD axis, and structural connection-related metrics vary along fastA_fastD-slowA_slowD axis, with which brain functional sites align better. It is also found that cortical landmarks, including sulcal pits and gyral hinges, spatially reside on the borders of the four patterns. These findings shed new lights on the relationship between cortex development, surface topology, axonal wiring pattern and brain functions.
引用
收藏
页码:1013 / 1029
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Time-Lines for Postnatal Myelin Development Differ Both Between Prefrontal Cortical Areas and Across Cortical Layers With Each Area
    Haber, Suzanne
    NEUROPSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY, 2018, 43 : S70 - S71
  • [42] Quantifying the Polygenic Architecture of the Human Cerebral Cortex: Extensive Genetic Overlap between Cortical Thickness and Surface Area
    van der Meer, Dennis
    Frei, Oleksandr
    Kaufmann, Tobias
    Chen, Chi-Hua
    Thompson, Wesley K.
    O'Connell, Kevin S.
    Sanchez, Jennifer Monereo
    Linden, David E. J.
    Westlye, Lars T.
    Dale, Anders M.
    Andreassen, Ole A.
    CEREBRAL CORTEX, 2020, 30 (10) : 5597 - 5603
  • [43] Coupling between local cortical neural activation and vasodilation in response to whisker stimulation depends upon the subthalamic vasodilator area (SVA).
    Golanov, EV
    Ileh, CP
    FASEB JOURNAL, 2002, 16 (05): : A1124 - A1125
  • [44] Cortical Surface Area and Subcortical Volume Imaging Differences Between African Americans and Caucasians with Relapsing Remitting Multiple Sclerosis
    Hackett, Melody
    Bao, Fen
    Santiago-Martinez, Carla
    Bernitsas, Evanthia
    NEUROLOGY, 2020, 94 (15)
  • [45] Difference of brain surface area and cortical volume between suicide attempters and non-attempters with major depressive disorder
    Kang, S. G.
    Cho, S. E.
    Na, K. S.
    Lee, J. S.
    Cho, S. J.
    Son, Y. D.
    Lee, Y. J.
    EUROPEAN NEUROPSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY, 2019, 29 : S597 - S598
  • [46] Inflammatory agents partially explain associations between cortical thickness, surface area, and body mass in adolescents and young adulthood
    X. Prats-Soteras
    M. A. Jurado
    J. Ottino-González
    I. García-García
    B. Segura
    X. Caldú
    C. Sánchez-Garre
    N. Miró
    C. Tor
    M. Sender-Palacios
    M. Garolera
    International Journal of Obesity, 2020, 44 : 1487 - 1496
  • [47] Differences in brain surface area and cortical volume between suicide attempters and non-attempters with major depressive disorder
    Kang, Seung-Gul
    Cho, Seo-Eun
    Na, Kyoung-Sae
    Lee, Jung Sun
    Joo, Sung Woo
    Cho, Seong-Jin
    Son, Young-Don
    Lee, Yu Jin
    PSYCHIATRY RESEARCH-NEUROIMAGING, 2020, 297
  • [48] Inflammatory agents partially explain associations between cortical thickness, surface area, and body mass in adolescents and young adulthood
    Prats-Soteras, X.
    Jurado, M. A.
    Ottino-Gonzalez, J.
    Garcia-Garcia, I
    Segura, B.
    Caldu, X.
    Sanchez-Garre, C.
    Miro, N.
    Tor, C.
    Sender-Palacios, M.
    Garolera, M.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF OBESITY, 2020, 44 (07) : 1487 - 1496
  • [49] A cross-sectional and longitudinal study of human brain development: The integration of cortical thickness, surface area, gyrification index, and cortical curvature into a unified analytical framework
    Kalantar-Hormozi, Hadis
    Patel, Raihaan
    Dai, Alyssa
    Ziolkowski, Justine
    Dong, Hao-Ming
    Holmes, Avram
    Raznahan, Armin
    Devenyi, Gabriel A.
    Chakravarty, M. Mallar
    NEUROIMAGE, 2023, 268
  • [50] SOME DATA CONCERNING THE GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE CEREBRAL CORTEX IN MAN .2. POSTNATAL GROWTH CHANGES IN THE CORTICAL SURFACE AREA
    TURNER, OA
    ARCHIVES OF NEUROLOGY AND PSYCHIATRY, 1950, 64 (03): : 378 - 384