Nature Communications (Sep 2023)

Myelination and excitation-inhibition balance synergistically shape structure-function coupling across the human cortex

  • Panagiotis Fotiadis,
  • Matthew Cieslak,
  • Xiaosong He,
  • Lorenzo Caciagli,
  • Mathieu Ouellet,
  • Theodore D. Satterthwaite,
  • Russell T. Shinohara,
  • Dani S. Bassett

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-41686-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 21

Abstract

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Abstract Recent work has demonstrated that the relationship between structural and functional connectivity varies regionally across the human brain, with reduced coupling emerging along the sensory-association cortical hierarchy. The biological underpinnings driving this expression, however, remain largely unknown. Here, we postulate that intracortical myelination and excitation-inhibition (EI) balance mediate the heterogeneous expression of structure-function coupling (SFC) and its temporal variance across the cortical hierarchy. We employ atlas- and voxel-based connectivity approaches to analyze neuroimaging data acquired from two groups of healthy participants. Our findings are consistent across six complementary processing pipelines: 1) SFC and its temporal variance respectively decrease and increase across the unimodal-transmodal and granular-agranular gradients; 2) increased myelination and lower EI-ratio are associated with more rigid SFC and restricted moment-to-moment SFC fluctuations; 3) a gradual shift from EI-ratio to myelination as the principal predictor of SFC occurs when traversing from granular to agranular cortical regions. Collectively, our work delivers a framework to conceptualize structure-function relationships in the human brain, paving the way for an improved understanding of how demyelination and/or EI-imbalances induce reorganization in brain disorders.