Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience (Oct 2020)

Aging Impacts the Overall Connectivity Strength of Regions Critical for Information Transfer Among Brain Networks

  • Epifanio Bagarinao,
  • Hirohisa Watanabe,
  • Hirohisa Watanabe,
  • Hirohisa Watanabe,
  • Satoshi Maesawa,
  • Satoshi Maesawa,
  • Daisuke Mori,
  • Kazuhiro Hara,
  • Kazuya Kawabata,
  • Noritaka Yoneyama,
  • Reiko Ohdake,
  • Kazunori Imai,
  • Michihito Masuda,
  • Takamasa Yokoi,
  • Aya Ogura,
  • Toshiaki Taoka,
  • Shuji Koyama,
  • Hiroki C. Tanabe,
  • Masahisa Katsuno,
  • Toshihiko Wakabayashi,
  • Masafumi Kuzuya,
  • Masafumi Kuzuya,
  • Minoru Hoshiyama,
  • Haruo Isoda,
  • Shinji Naganawa,
  • Norio Ozaki,
  • Norio Ozaki,
  • Gen Sobue

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnagi.2020.592469
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

Read online

Recent studies have demonstrated that connector hubs, regions considered critical for the flow of information across neural systems, are mostly involved in neurodegenerative dementia. Considering that aging can significantly affect the brain’s intrinsic connectivity, identifying aging’s impact on these regions’ overall connection strength is important to differentiate changes associated with healthy aging from neurodegenerative disorders. Using resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging data from a carefully selected cohort of 175 healthy volunteers aging from 21 to 86 years old, we computed an intrinsic connectivity contrast (ICC) metric, which quantifies a region’s overall connectivity strength, for whole brain, short-range, and long-range connections and examined age-related changes of this metric over the adult lifespan. We have identified a limited number of hub regions with ICC values that showed significant negative relationship with age. These include the medial precentral/midcingulate gyri and insula with both their short-range and long-range (and thus whole-brain) ICC values negatively associated with age, and the angular, middle frontal, and posterior cingulate gyri with their long-range ICC values mainly involved. Seed-based connectivity analyses further confirmed that these regions are connector hubs with connectivity profile that strongly overlapped with multiple large-scale brain networks. General cognitive performance was not associated with these hubs’ ICC values. These findings suggest that even healthy aging could negatively impact the efficiency of regions critical for facilitating information transfer among different functional brain networks. The extent of the regions involved, however, was limited.

Keywords