Bioengineering Graduate Program, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN 46556, USA.
Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA; Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN 46556, USA.
Neuroimage. 2023 Sep;278:120283. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2023.120283. Epub 2023 Jul 27.
Humans are known to have significant and consistent differences in thickness throughout the cortex, with thick outer gyral folds and thin inner sulcal folds. Our previous work has suggested a mechanical basis for this thickness pattern, with the forces generated during cortical folding leading to thick gyri and thin sulci, and shown that cortical thickness varies along a gyral-sulcal spectrum in humans. While other primate species are expected to exhibit similar patterns of cortical thickness, it is currently unknown how these patterns scale across different sizes, forms, and foldedness. Among primates, brains vary enormously from roughly the size of a grape to the size of a grapefruit, and from nearly smooth to dramatically folded; of these, human brains are the largest and most folded. These variations in size and form make comparative neuroanatomy a rich resource for investigating common trends that transcend differences between species. In this study, we examine 12 primate species in order to cover a wide range of sizes and forms, and investigate the scaling of their cortical thickness relative to the surface geometry. The 12 species were selected due to the public availability of either reconstructed surfaces and/or population templates. After obtaining or reconstructing 3D surfaces from publicly available neuroimaging data, we used our surface-based computational pipeline (https://github.com/mholla/curveball) to analyze patterns of cortical thickness and folding with respect to size (total surface area), geometry (i.e. curvature, shape, and sulcal depth), and foldedness (gyrification). In all 12 species, we found consistent cortical thickness variations along a gyral-sulcal spectrum, with convex shapes thicker than concave shapes and saddle shapes in between. Furthermore, we saw an increasing thickness difference between gyri and sulci as brain size increases. Our results suggest a systematic folding mechanism relating local cortical thickness to geometry. Finally, all of our reconstructed surfaces and morphometry data are available for future research in comparative neuroanatomy.
人类大脑皮层的厚度在整个脑区存在显著且一致的差异,表现为外凸的脑回较厚,内凹的脑沟较薄。我们之前的工作提出了一种厚度模式的力学基础,即大脑皮层折叠过程中产生的力导致了脑回较厚和脑沟较薄,并表明人类大脑皮层的厚度沿着脑回-脑沟谱变化。虽然其他灵长类动物也预计会表现出类似的皮层厚度模式,但目前尚不清楚这些模式如何在不同的大小、形状和折叠程度上进行缩放。在灵长类动物中,大脑的大小从葡萄大小到柚子大小不等,形状从几乎平滑到显著折叠不等;其中,人类大脑是最大和最折叠的。这些大小和形状的变化使比较神经解剖学成为一个丰富的资源,可以用来研究超越物种差异的共同趋势。在这项研究中,我们检查了 12 种灵长类动物,以涵盖广泛的大小和形状,并研究它们的皮层厚度相对于表面几何形状的缩放。这 12 个物种是由于可公开获得重建表面和/或群体模板而被选中的。在从公开的神经影像学数据中获得或重建 3D 表面后,我们使用基于表面的计算管道(https://github.com/mholla/curveball)来分析皮层厚度和折叠相对于大小(总表面积)、几何形状(即曲率、形状和脑沟深度)和折叠程度(脑回形成)的模式。在所有 12 个物种中,我们发现沿着脑回-脑沟谱存在一致的皮层厚度变化,凸形比凹形厚,鞍形介于两者之间。此外,随着大脑尺寸的增加,脑回和脑沟之间的厚度差异也在增加。我们的结果表明,一种与局部皮层厚度相关的系统折叠机制与几何形状有关。最后,我们所有的重建表面和形态测量数据都可供未来比较神经解剖学的研究使用。