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Adolescent maturation of cortical excitation-inhibition balance based on individualized biophysical network modeling.

Authors :
Saberi A
Wischnewski KJ
Jung K
Lotter LD
Schaare HL
Banaschewski T
Barker GJ
Bokde ALW
Desrivières S
Flor H
Grigis A
Garavan H
Gowland P
Heinz A
Brühl R
Martinot JL
Martinot MP
Artiges E
Nees F
Orfanos DP
Lemaitre H
Poustka L
Hohmann S
Holz N
Baeuchl C
Smolka MN
Vaidya N
Walter H
Whelan R
Schumann G
Paus T
Dukart J
Bernhardt BC
Popovych OV
Eickhoff SB
Valk SL
Source :
BioRxiv : the preprint server for biology [bioRxiv] 2024 Jun 18. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Jun 18.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The balance of excitation and inhibition is a key functional property of cortical microcircuits which changes through the lifespan. Adolescence is considered a crucial period for the maturation of excitation-inhibition balance. This has been primarily observed in animal studies, yet human in vivo evidence on adolescent maturation of the excitation-inhibition balance at the individual level is limited. Here, we developed an individualized in vivo marker of regional excitation-inhibition balance in human adolescents, estimated using large-scale simulations of biophysical network models fitted to resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging data from two independent cross-sectional (N = 752) and longitudinal (N = 149) cohorts. We found a widespread relative increase of inhibition in association cortices paralleled by a relative age-related increase of excitation, or lack of change, in sensorimotor areas across both datasets. This developmental pattern co-aligned with multiscale markers of sensorimotor-association differentiation. The spatial pattern of excitation-inhibition development in adolescence was robust to inter-individual variability of structural connectomes and modeling configurations. Notably, we found that alternative simulation-based markers of excitation-inhibition balance show a variable sensitivity to maturational change. Taken together, our study highlights an increase of inhibition during adolescence in association areas using cross sectional and longitudinal data, and provides a robust computational framework to estimate microcircuit maturation in vivo at the individual level.<br />Competing Interests: Disclosures Dr Banaschewski served in an advisory or consultancy role for eye level, Infectopharm, Medice, Neurim Pharmaceuticals, Oberberg GmbH and Takeda. He received conference support or speaker’s fee by Janssen, Medice and Takeda. He received royalties from Hogrefe, Kohlhammer, CIP Medien, Oxford University Press. The present work is unrelated to the above grants and relationships. Dr Barker has received honoraria from General Electric Healthcare for teaching on scanner programming courses. Dr Poustka served in an advisory or consultancy role for Roche and Viforpharm and received speaker’s fees from Shire. She received royalties from Hogrefe, Kohlhammer and Schattauer. The present work is unrelated to the above grants and relationships. The other authors report no biomedical financial interests or potential conflicts of interest.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2692-8205
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
BioRxiv : the preprint server for biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38948771
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.06.18.599509