Expansion of a frontostriatal salience network in individuals with depression

Author:

Lynch Charles J.,Elbau Immanuel,Ng Tommy,Ayaz Aliza,Zhu Shasha,Manfredi Nicola,Johnson Megan,Wolk Danielle,Power Jonathan D.,Gordon Evan M.,Kay Kendrick,Aloysi Amy,Moia Stefano,Caballero-Gaudes Cesar,Victoria Lindsay W.,Solomonov Nili,Goldwaser Eric,Zebley Benjamin,Grosenick Logan,Downar Jonathan,Vila-Rodriguez Fidel,Daskalakis Zafiris J.,Blumberger Daniel M.ORCID,Williams NolanORCID,Gunning Faith M.,Liston Conor

Abstract

SUMMARYHundreds of neuroimaging studies spanning two decades have revealed differences in brain structure and functional connectivity in depression, but with modest effect sizes, complicating efforts to derive mechanistic pathophysiologic insights or develop biomarkers.1Furthermore, although depression is a fundamentally episodic condition, few neuroimaging studies have taken a longitudinal approach, which is critical for understanding cause and effect and delineating mechanisms that drive mood state transitions over time. The emerging field of precision functional mapping using densely-sampled longitudinal neuroimaging data has revealed unexpected, functionally meaningful individual differences in brain network topology in healthy individuals,2–5but these approaches have never been applied to individuals with depression. Here, using precision functional mapping techniques and 11 datasets comprising n=187 repeatedly sampled individuals and >21,000 minutes of fMRI data, we show that the frontostriatal salience network is expanded two-fold in most individuals with depression. This effect was replicable in multiple samples, including large-scale, group-average data (N=1,231 subjects), and caused primarily by network border shifts affecting specific functional systems, with three distinct modes of encroachment occurring in different individuals. Salience network expansion was unexpectedly stable over time, unaffected by changes in mood state, and detectable in children before the subsequent onset of depressive symptoms in adolescence. Longitudinal analyses of individuals scanned up to 62 times over 1.5 years identified connectivity changes in specific frontostriatal circuits that tracked fluctuations in specific symptom domains and predicted future anhedonia symptoms before they emerged. Together, these findings identify a stable trait-like brain network topology that may confer risk for depression and mood-state dependent connectivity changes in frontostriatal circuits that predict the emergence and remission of depressive symptoms over time.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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