4.8 Article

Mapping developmental regionalization and patterns of cortical surface area from 29 post-menstrual weeks to 2 years of age

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2121748119

Keywords

cortical surface area; early brain development; developmental regionalization

Funding

  1. NIH [MH116225, MH117943, MH123202, 1U01MH110274]

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This study utilizes high-quality pediatric brain MRI scans and advanced image processing tools to parcellate the cerebral cortex into distinct subdivisions based on developmental patterns, revealing structural and functional differences among these subdivisions and patterns of early cortical surface expansion.
Surface area of the human cerebral cortex expands extremely dynamically and regionally heterogeneously from the third trimester of pregnancy to 2 y of age, reflecting the spatial heterogeneity of the underlying microstructural and functional development of the cerebral cortex. However, little is known about the developmental patterns and region-alization of cortical surface area during this critical stage, due to the lack of high-quality imaging data and accurate computational tools for pediatric brain MRI data. To fill this critical knowledge gap, by leveraging 1,037 high-quality MRI scans with the age between 29 post-menstrual weeks and 24 mo from 735 pediatric subjects in two complementary datasets, i.e., the Baby Connectome Project (BCP) and the developing Human Connectome Project (dHCP), and state-of-the-art dedicated image-processing tools, we unprecedentedly parcellate the cerebral cortex into a set of distinct subdivisions purely according to the developmental patterns of the cortical surface. Our discovered developmentally distinct subdivisions correspond well to structurally and functionally meaningful regions and reveal spatially contiguous, hierarchical, and bilaterally symmetric patterns of early cortical surface expansion. We also show that high-order association subdivisions, where cortical folds emerge later during prenatal stages, undergo more dramatic cortical surface expansion during infancy, compared with the central regions, especially the sensorimotor and insula cortices, thus forming a distinct central-pole division in early cortical surface expansion. These results provide an important reference for exploring and understanding dynamic early brain development in health and disease.

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