Tracing cortical circuits in humans and non-human primates from high resolution connectomic, transcriptomic, and temporal dimensions

Author:

Charvet Christine J.,Ofori Kwadwo,Baucum Christine,Sun Jianli,Modrell Melinda S.,Hekmatyar Khan,Edlow Brian L.ORCID,van der Kouwe Andre J.

Abstract

AbstractThe neural circuits that support human cognition are a topic of enduring interest. Yet, the lack of tools available to map human brain circuits has precluded our ability to trace the human and non-human primate connectome. We harnessed high-resolution connectomic, anatomic, and transcriptomic data to investigate the evolution and development of frontal cortex circuitry. We applied machine learning to RNA sequencing data to find corresponding ages between humans and macaques and to compare the development of circuits across species. We transcriptionally defined neural circuits by testing for associations between gene expression and white matter maturation. We then considered transcriptional and structural growth to test whether frontal cortex circuit maturation is unusually extended in humans relative to other species. We also considered gene expression and high-resolution diffusion MR tractography of adult brains to test for cross-species variation in frontal cortex circuits. We found that frontal cortex circuitry development is extended in primates, and concomitant with an expansion in cortico-cortical pathways compared with mice in adulthood. Importantly, we found that these parameters varied relatively little across humans and studied primates. These data identify a surprising collection of conserved features in frontal cortex circuits across humans and Old World monkeys. Our work demonstrates that integrating transcriptional and connectomic data across temporal dimensions is a robust approach to trace the evolution of brain connectomics in primates.Significance StatementWe lack appropriate tools to visualize the human brain connectome. We develop new approaches to study connections in the human and non-human primate brains. The integration of transcription with structure offers an unprecedented opportunity to study circuitry evolution. Our integrative approach finds corresponding ages across species and transcriptionally defines neural circuits. We used this information to test for variation in circuit maturation across species and found a surprising constellation of similar features in frontal cortex neural circuits across humans and primates. Integrating across scales of biological organization expands the repertoire of tools available to study connections in primates, which opens new avenues to study connections in health and diseases of the human brain.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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