4.7 Article

Overlooked Tertiary Sulci Serve as a Meso-Scale Link between Microstructural and Functional Properties of Human Lateral Prefrontal Cortex

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 41, Issue 10, Pages 2229-2244

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2362-20.2021

Keywords

brain mapping; connectivity; functional neuroanatomy; microstructure; morphology; prefrontal cortex

Categories

Funding

  1. University of California, Berkeley
  2. Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute
  3. National Institutes of Health [RO1-MH-63901]

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The study reveals overlooked tertiary sulci in LPFC play a crucial role in connecting functional and structural properties in individual participants, supporting the theory of a functional hierarchy within LPFC. Additionally, differences in myelin content across different components of the MFG suggest a deeper understanding of cortical microstructure.
Understanding the relationship between neuroanatomy and function in portions of cortex that perform functions largely specific to humans such as lateral prefrontal cortex (LPFC) is of major interest in systems and cognitive neuroscience. When considering neuroanatomical-functional relationships in LPFC, shallow indentations in cortex known as tertiary sulci have been largely unexplored. Here, by implementing a multimodal approach and manually defining 936 neuroanatomical structures in 72 hemispheres (in both males and females), we show that a subset of these overlooked tertiary sulci serve as a meso-scale link between microstructural (myelin content) and functional (network connectivity) properties of human LPFC in individual participants. For example, the posterior middle frontal sulcus (pmfs) is a tertiary sulcus with three components that differ in their myelin content, resting-state connectivity profiles, and engagement across meta-analyses of 83 cognitive tasks. Further, generating microstructural profiles of myelin content across cortical depths for each pmfs component and the surrounding middle frontal gyrus (MFG) shows that both gyral and sulcal components of the MFG have greater myelin content in deeper compared with superficial layers and that the myelin content in superficial layers of the gyral components is greater than sulcal components. These findings support a classic, yet largely unconsidered theory that tertiary sulci may serve as landmarks in association cortices, as well as a modern cognitive neuroscience theory proposing a functional hierarchy in LPFC. As there is a growing need for computational tools that automatically define tertiary sulci throughout cortex, we share pmfs probabilistic sulcal maps with the field.

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