eLife (Feb 2024)

Transcriptional cartography integrates multiscale biology of the human cortex

  • Konrad Wagstyl,
  • Sophie Adler,
  • Jakob Seidlitz,
  • Simon Vandekar,
  • Travis T Mallard,
  • Richard Dear,
  • Alex R DeCasien,
  • Theodore D Satterthwaite,
  • Siyuan Liu,
  • Petra E Vértes,
  • Russell T Shinohara,
  • Aaron Alexander-Bloch,
  • Daniel H Geschwind,
  • Armin Raznahan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.86933
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

Read online

The cerebral cortex underlies many of our unique strengths and vulnerabilities, but efforts to understand human cortical organization are challenged by reliance on incompatible measurement methods at different spatial scales. Macroscale features such as cortical folding and functional activation are accessed through spatially dense neuroimaging maps, whereas microscale cellular and molecular features are typically measured with sparse postmortem sampling. Here, we integrate these distinct windows on brain organization by building upon existing postmortem data to impute, validate, and analyze a library of spatially dense neuroimaging-like maps of human cortical gene expression. These maps allow spatially unbiased discovery of cortical zones with extreme transcriptional profiles or unusually rapid transcriptional change which index distinct microstructure and predict neuroimaging measures of cortical folding and functional activation. Modules of spatially coexpressed genes define a family of canonical expression maps that integrate diverse spatial scales and temporal epochs of human brain organization – ranging from protein–protein interactions to large-scale systems for cognitive processing. These module maps also parse neuropsychiatric risk genes into subsets which tag distinct cyto-laminar features and differentially predict the location of altered cortical anatomy and gene expression in patients. Taken together, the methods, resources, and findings described here advance our understanding of human cortical organization and offer flexible bridges to connect scientific fields operating at different spatial scales of human brain research.

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