Early adversity changes the economic conditions of mouse structural brain network organization

Author:

Carozza Sofia1ORCID,Holmes Joni12,Vértes Petra E.3,Bullmore Ed34,Arefin Tanzil M.5,Pugliese Alexa6,Zhang Jiangyang5,Kaffman Arie6,Akarca Danyal1ORCID,Astle Duncan E.13

Affiliation:

1. MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit University of Cambridge Cambridge UK

2. School of Psychology University of East Anglia Norwich UK

3. Department of Psychiatry University of Cambridge Cambridge UK

4. Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Wolfson Brain Imaging Centre University of Cambridge Cambridge UK

5. Bernard and Irene Schwartz Center for Biomedical Imaging, Department of Radiology New York University School of Medicine New York New York USA

6. Department of Psychiatry Yale University School of Medicine New Haven Connecticut USA

Abstract

AbstractEarly adversity can change educational, cognitive, and mental health outcomes. However, the neural processes through which early adversity exerts these effects remain largely unknown. We used generative network modeling of the mouse connectome to test whether unpredictable postnatal stress shifts the constraints that govern the organization of the structural connectome. A model that trades off the wiring cost of long‐distance connections with topological homophily (i.e., links between regions with shared neighbors) generated simulations that successfully replicate the rodent connectome. The imposition of early life adversity shifted the best‐performing parameter combinations toward zero, heightening the stochastic nature of the generative process. Put simply, unpredictable postnatal stress changes the economic constraints that reproduce rodent connectome organization, introducing greater randomness into the development of the simulations. While this change may constrain the development of cognitive abilities, it could also reflect an adaptive mechanism that facilitates effective responses to future challenges.

Funder

NIHR Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre

Medical Research Council

Templeton World Charity Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience,Developmental Biology,Developmental Neuroscience,Developmental and Educational Psychology

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