Topographic organization of the human caudate functional connectivity and age-related changes with resting-state fMRI

Author:

O'Rawe Jonathan F.,Leung Hoi-Chung

Abstract

The striatum is postulated to play a central role in gating cortical processing during goal-oriented behavior. While many human neuroimaging studies have treated the striatum as an undivided whole or several homogeneous compartments, some recent studies showed that its circuitry is topographically organized and has more complex relations with the cortical networks than previously assumed. Here, we took a gradient functional connectivity mapping approach that utilizes the entire anatomical space of the caudate nucleus to examine the organization of its functional relationship with the rest of the brain and how its topographic mapping changes with age. We defined the topography of the caudate functional connectivity using three publicly available resting-state fMRI datasets. We replicated and extended previous findings. First, we found two stable gradients of caudate connectivity patterns along its medial-lateral (M-L) and anterior-posterior (A-P) axes, supporting findings from previous tract-tracing studies of non-human primates that there are at least two main organizational principles within the caudate nucleus. Second, unlike previous emphasis of the A-P topology, we showed that the differential connectivity patterns along the M-L gradient of caudate are more clearly organized with the large-scale neural networks; such that brain networks associated with internal vs. external orienting behavior are respectively more closely linked to the medial vs. lateral extent of the caudate. Third, the caudate's M-L organization showed greater age-related reduction in integrity, which was further associated with age-related changes in behavioral measures of executive functions. In sum, our analysis confirmed a sometimes overlooked M-L functional connectivity gradient within the caudate nucleus, with its lateral longitudinal zone more closely linked to the frontoparietal cortical circuits and age-related changes in cognitive control. These findings provide a more precise mapping of the human caudate functional connectivity, both in terms of the gradient organization with cortical networks and age-related changes in such organization.

Funder

State University of New York

Publisher

Frontiers Media SA

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience,Developmental Neuroscience,Neuroscience (miscellaneous)

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