4.8 Article

Functional hierarchy underlies preferential connectivity disturbances in schizophrenia

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1508436113

Keywords

functional connectivity; schizophrenia; computational modeling

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [DP50D012109-02, MH080912, MH43775, MH077945, MH074797, T32GM 007205]
  2. National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism [2P50AA012870-11]
  3. National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and Depression Young Investigator award
  4. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke [T32 NS007224]
  5. Yale Center for Clinical Investigation
  6. [R01-MH062349]

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Schizophrenia may involve an elevated excitation/inhibition (E/I) ratio in cortical microcircuits. It remains unknown how this regulatory disturbance maps onto neuroimaging findings. To address this issue, we implemented E/I perturbations within a neural model of large-scale functional connectivity, which predicted hyperconnectivity following E/I elevation. To test predictions, we examined resting-state functional MRI in 161 schizophrenia patients and 164 healthy subjects. As predicted, patients exhibited elevated functional connectivity that correlated with symptom levels, and was most prominent in association cortices, such as the fronto-parietal control network. This pattern was absent in patients with bipolar disorder (n = 73). To account for the pattern observed in schizophrenia, we integrated neurobiologically plausible, hierarchical differences in association vs. sensory recurrent neuronal dynamics into our model. This in silico architecture revealed preferential vulnerability of association networks to E/I imbalance, which we verified empirically. Reported effects implicate widespread microcircuit E/I imbalance as a parsimonious mechanism for emergent inhomogeneous dysconnectivity in schizophrenia.

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