Adolescence is associated with genomically patterned consolidation of the hubs of the human brain connectome

Author:

Whitaker Kirstie J.ORCID,Vértes Petra E.ORCID,Romero-Garcia Rafael,Váša František,Moutoussis Michael,Prabhu Gita,Weiskopf Nikolaus,Callaghan Martina F.,Wagstyl Konrad,Rittman Timothy,Tait Roger,Ooi Cinly,Suckling John,Inkster Becky,Fonagy Peter,Dolan Raymond J.,Jones Peter B.,Goodyer Ian M.,Bullmore Edward T.ORCID,

Abstract

How does human brain structure mature during adolescence? We used MRI to measure cortical thickness and intracortical myelination in 297 population volunteers aged 14–24 y old. We found and replicated that association cortical areas were thicker and less myelinated than primary cortical areas at 14 y. However, association cortex had faster rates of shrinkage and myelination over the course of adolescence. Age-related increases in cortical myelination were maximized approximately at the internal layer of projection neurons. Adolescent cortical myelination and shrinkage were coupled and specifically associated with a dorsoventrally patterned gene expression profile enriched for synaptic, oligodendroglial- and schizophrenia-related genes. Topologically efficient and biologically expensive hubs of the brain anatomical network had greater rates of shrinkage/myelination and were associated with overexpression of the same transcriptional profile as cortical consolidation. We conclude that normative human brain maturation involves a genetically patterned process of consolidating anatomical network hubs. We argue that developmental variation of this consolidation process may be relevant both to normal cognitive and behavioral changes and the high incidence of schizophrenia during human brain adolescence.

Funder

Wellcome Trust

Medical Research Council

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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