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Paper Title

Adolescence is associated with genomically patterned consolidation of the hubs of the human brain connectome

Authors

John Suckling
John Suckling
Timothy Rittman
Timothy Rittman
Peter B Jones
Peter B Jones
Peter Fonagy
Peter Fonagy
Raymond J. Dolan
Raymond J. Dolan
Michael Moutoussis
Michael Moutoussis
Rafael Romero-Garcia
Rafael Romero-Garcia
Kirstie Jane Whitaker
Kirstie Jane Whitaker
Ian M. Goodyer
Ian M. Goodyer
František Váša
František Váša
Petra E Vértes
Petra E Vértes
Becky Inkster
Becky Inkster
Nikolaus Weiskopf
Nikolaus Weiskopf

Article Type

Research Article

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 113 | Issue : 32 | Page No : 9105-9110

Published On

February, 2016

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Abstract

Adolescence is a period of human brain growth and high incidence of mental health disorders. Here, we show consistently in two MRI cohorts that human brain changes in adolescence were concentrated on the more densely connected hubs of the connectome (i.e., association cortical regions that mediated efficient connectivity throughout the human brain structural network). Hubs were less myelinated at 14 y but had faster rates of myelination and cortical shrinkage in the 14- to 24-y period. This topologically focused process of cortical consolidation was associated with expression of genes enriched for normal synaptic and myelin-related processes and risk of schizophrenia. Consolidation of anatomical network hubs could be important for normal and clinically disordered adolescent brain development.

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