4.8 Article

Connectomes across development reveal principles of brain maturation

Journal

NATURE
Volume 596, Issue 7871, Pages 257-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-03778-8

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NSF PoLS [NSF 1806818]
  2. Mount Sinai Foundation
  3. NIMH
  4. Silvio Conte Center [P50 MH094271]
  5. NIH [R01-NS082525-01A1, U24 NS109102-01]
  6. HFSP [RGP0051/2014]
  7. NIH Brain Initiative [1U01NS111697-01]
  8. NSF BRAIN EAGER [IOS-1452593]
  9. CIHR [MOP-123250]
  10. Radcliffe Institute
  11. MURI [GG0008784]
  12. [154274]

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The study on isogenic Caenorhabditis elegans individuals' brain connectome reveals that while the overall geometry of the brain remains stable from birth to adulthood, there are substantial changes in chemical synaptic connectivity. Comparing connectomes between individuals shows significant differences, while comparing connectomes across maturation stages reveals consistent wiring changes between different neurons.
An animal's nervous system changes as its body grows from birth to adulthood and its behaviours mature(1-8). The form and extent of circuit remodelling across the connectome is unknown(3,9-15). Here we used serial-section electron microscopy to reconstruct the full brain of eight isogenic Caenorhabditis elegans individuals across postnatal stages to investigate how it changes with age. The overall geometry of the brain is preserved from birth to adulthood, but substantial changes in chemical synaptic connectivity emerge on this consistent scaffold. Comparing connectomes between individuals reveals substantial differences in connectivity that make each brain partly unique. Comparing connectomes across maturation reveals consistent wiring changes between different neurons. These changes alter the strength of existing connections and create new connections. Collective changes in the network alter information processing. During development, the central decision-making circuitry is maintained, whereas sensory and motor pathways substantially remodel. With age, the brain becomes progressively more feedforward and discernibly modular. Thus developmental connectomics reveals principles that underlie brain maturation.

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