Publication | Open Access
Hierarchy of transcriptomic specialization across human cortex captured by myelin map topography
19
Citations
56
References
2017
Year
Unknown Venue
NeurogenomicsGeneticsBrain MappingBrain OrganizationHierarchical GradientsStrong Hierarchical GradientsSocial SciencesHuman CortexNeurologyTranscriptomic SpecializationCognitive NeuroscienceNetwork NeuroscienceNeurological FunctionNeurogeneticsBrain StructureNeuroimagingMyelin Map TopographyGene ExpressionImaging GenomicsNeuroimaging BiomarkersCellular NeuroscienceNeuroanatomyComputational NeuroscienceConnectomicsHuman NeuroscienceNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemSystems BiologyMedicine
Hierarchy provides a unifying principle for the macroscale organization of anatomical and functional properties across primate cortex, yet the microscale bases of specialization across human cortex are poorly understood. Cortical hierarchy is conventionally informed by invasive measurements of long-range projections, creating the need for a principled proxy measure of hierarchy in humans. Moreover, cortex exhibits marked interareal variation in patterns of gene expression, yet organizing principles of its transcriptional architecture remain unclear. We hypothesized that functional specialization of human cortical microcircuitry involves hierarchical gradients of gene expression. We found that a noninvasive neuroimaging measure, the MRI-derived myelin map, reliably indexes hierarchy and closely resembles the dominant pattern of transcriptomic variation across human cortex. We found strong hierarchical gradients in expression profiles of genes related to microcircuit function and neuropsychiatric disorders. Our findings suggest that hierarchy defines an axis shared by the transcriptomic and anatomical architectures of human cortex, and that hierarchical gradients of microscale properties contribute to macroscale specialization of cortical function.
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