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- Title
Structural Covariance of Depth-Dependent Intracortical Myelination in the Human Brain and Its Application to Drug-Naïve Schizophrenia: A T1w/T2w MRI Study.
- Authors
Wei, Wei; Yin, Yubing; Zhang, Yamin; Li, Xiaojing; Li, Mingli; Guo, Wanjun; Wang, Qiang; Deng, Wei; Ma, Xiaohong; Zhao, Liansheng; Palaniyappan, Lena; Li, Tao
- Abstract
Aberrations in intracortical myelination are increasingly being considered as a cardinal feature in the pathophysiology of schizophrenia. We investigated the network-level distribution of intracortical myelination across various cortex depths. We enrolled 126 healthy subjects and 106 first-episode drug-naïve schizophrenia patients. We used T1w/T2w ratio as a proxy of intracortical myelination, parcellated cortex into several equivolumetric surfaces based on cortical depths and mapped T1w/T2w ratios to each surface. Non-negative matrix factorization was used to generate depth-dependent structural covariance networks (dSCNs) of intracortical myelination from 2 healthy controls datasets—one from our study and another from 100-unrelated dataset of the Human Connectome Project. For patient versus control comparisons, partial least squares approach was used; we also related myelination to clinical features of schizophrenia. We found that dSCNs were highly reproducible in 2 independent samples. Network-level myelination was reduced in prefrontal and cingulate cortex and increased in perisylvian cortex in schizophrenia. The abnormal network-level myelination had a canonical correlation with symptom burden in schizophrenia. Moreover, myelination of prefrontal cortex correlated with duration of untreated psychosis. In conclusion, we offer a feasible and sensitive framework to study depth-dependent myelination and its relationship with clinical features.
- Publication
Cerebral Cortex, 2022, Vol 32, Issue 11, p2373
- ISSN
1047-3211
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1093/cercor/bhab337