Author:
Ng Bernard,Tasaki Shinya,Greathouse Kelsey M,Walker Courtney K,Zhang Ada,Covitz Sydney,Cieslak Matt,Adamson Ashley B,Andrade Julia P,Poovey Emily H,Curtis Kendall A,Muhammad Hamad M,Seidlitz Jakob,Satterthwaite Ted,Bennett David A,Seyfried Nicholas T,Vogel Jacob,Gaiteri Chris,Herskowitz Jeremy H
Abstract
AbstractNeuroimaging is commonly used to infer human brain connectivity, but those measurements are far-removed from the molecular underpinnings at synapses. To uncover the molecular basis of human brain connectivity, we analyzed a unique cohort of 98 individuals who provided neuroimaging and genetic data contemporaneous with dendritic spine morphometric, proteomic, and gene expression data from the superior frontal and inferior temporal gyri. Through cellular contextualization of the molecular data with dendritic spine morphology, we identified hundreds of proteins related to synapses, energy metabolism, and RNA processing that explain between-individual differences in functional connectivity and structural covariation. By integrating data at the genetic, molecular, subcellular, and tissue levels, we bridged the divergent fields of molecular biology and neuroimaging to identify a molecular basis of brain connectivity.One-Sentence SummaryDendritic spine morphometry and synaptic proteins unite the divergent fields of molecular biology and neuroimaging.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献