Conservative and disruptive modes of adolescent change in human brain functional connectivity

Author:

Váša František,Romero-Garcia Rafael,Kitzbichler Manfred G.ORCID,Seidlitz JakobORCID,Whitaker Kirstie J.ORCID,Vaghi Matilde M.,Kundu Prantik,Patel Ameera X.,Fonagy PeterORCID,Dolan Raymond J.,Jones Peter B.,Goodyer Ian M.,Vértes Petra E.ORCID,Bullmore Edward T.ORCID,

Abstract

Adolescent changes in human brain function are not entirely understood. Here, we used multiecho functional MRI (fMRI) to measure developmental change in functional connectivity (FC) of resting-state oscillations between pairs of 330 cortical regions and 16 subcortical regions in 298 healthy adolescents scanned 520 times. Participants were aged 14 to 26 y and were scanned on 1 to 3 occasions at least 6 mo apart. We found 2 distinct modes of age-related change in FC: “conservative” and “disruptive.” Conservative development was characteristic of primary cortex, which was strongly connected at 14 y and became even more connected in the period from 14 to 26 y. Disruptive development was characteristic of association cortex and subcortical regions, where connectivity was remodeled: connections that were weak at 14 y became stronger during adolescence, and connections that were strong at 14 y became weaker. These modes of development were quantified using the maturational index (MI), estimated as Spearman’s correlation between edgewise baseline FC (at 14 y, FC14) and adolescent change in FC (ΔFC1426), at each region. Disruptive systems (with negative MI) were activated by social cognition and autobiographical memory tasks in prior fMRI data and significantly colocated with prior maps of aerobic glycolysis (AG), AG-related gene expression, postnatal cortical surface expansion, and adolescent shrinkage of cortical thickness. The presence of these 2 modes of development was robust to numerous sensitivity analyses. We conclude that human brain organization is disrupted during adolescence by remodeling of FC between association cortical and subcortical areas.

Funder

Wellcome

Gates Cambridge Trust

RCUK | Medical Research Council

MQ: Transforming Mental Health

RCUK | Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

DH | National Institute for Health Research

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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