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      Longitudinal Changes in the Cerebral Cortex Functional Organization of Healthy Elderly

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          Abstract

          Healthy aging is accompanied by disruptions in the functional modular organization of the human brain. Cross-sectional studies have shown age-related reductions in the functional segregation and distinctiveness of brain networks. However, less is known about the longitudinal changes in brain functional modular organization and their associations with aging-related cognitive decline. We examined age- and aging-related changes in functional architecture of the cerebral cortex using a dataset comprising a cross-sectional healthy young cohort of 57 individuals (mean ± SD age, 23.71 ± 3.61 years, 22 males) and a longitudinal healthy elderly cohort of 72 individuals (mean ± baseline age, 68.22 ± 5.80 years, 39 males) with 2–3 time points (18–24 months apart) of task-free fMRI data. We found both cross-sectional (elderly vs young) and longitudinal (in elderly) global decreases in network segregation (decreased local efficiency), integration (decreased global efficiency), and module distinctiveness (increased participation coefficient and decreased system segregation). At the modular level, whereas cross-sectional analyses revealed higher participation coefficient across all modules in the elderly compared with young participants, longitudinal analyses revealed focal longitudinal participation coefficient increases in three higher-order cognitive modules: control network, default mode network, and salience/ventral attention network. Cross-sectionally, elderly participants also showed worse attention performance with lower local efficiency and higher mean participation coefficient, and worse global cognitive performance with higher participation coefficient in the dorsal attention/control network. These findings suggest that healthy aging is associated with whole-brain connectome-wide changes in the functional modular organization of the brain, accompanied by loss of functional segregation, particularly in higher-order cognitive networks.

          SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Cross-sectional studies have demonstrated age-related reductions in the functional segregation and distinctiveness of brain networks. However, longitudinal aging-related changes in brain functional modular architecture and their links to cognitive decline remain relatively understudied. Using graph theoretical and community detection approaches to study task-free functional network changes in a cross-sectional young and longitudinal healthy elderly cohort, we showed that aging was associated with global declines in network segregation, integration, and module distinctiveness, and specific declines in distinctiveness of higher-order cognitive networks. Further, such functional network deterioration was associated with poorer cognitive performance cross-sectionally. Our findings suggest that healthy aging is associated with system-level changes in brain functional modular organization, accompanied by functional segregation loss particularly in higher-order networks specialized for cognition.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Neurosci
          J. Neurosci
          jneuro
          jneurosci
          J. Neurosci
          The Journal of Neuroscience
          Society for Neuroscience
          0270-6474
          1529-2401
          10 July 2019
          10 January 2020
          : 39
          : 28
          : 5534-5550
          Affiliations
          [1] 1Centre for Cognitive Neuroscience, Neuroscience and Behavioural Disorders Programme, Duke-National University of Singapore Medical School, Singapore 169857, and
          [2] 2Clinical Imaging Research Centre, National University of Singapore, Singapore 117599
          Author notes
          Correspondence should be addressed to Juan Helen Zhou at helen.zhou@ 123456duke-nus.edu.sg

          Author contributions: J.S.X.C., J.C.L., M.W.L.C., and J.H.Z. designed research; J.S.X.C., J.-H.P., and J.C.L. performed research; J.S.X.C., K.K.N., J.T., and C.W. analyzed data; J.S.X.C. wrote the first draft of the paper; J.S.X.C., K.K.N., J.T., C.W., J.-H.P., J.C.L., M.W.L.C., and J.H.Z. edited the paper; J.S.X.C. wrote the paper.

          *M.W.L.C. and J.H.Z. contributed equally to this work as joint senior authors.

          Author information
          https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0584-7679
          https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1985-2110
          https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7707-7557
          https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6087-0548
          https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0180-8648
          Article
          PMC6616287 PMC6616287 6616287 1451-18
          10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1451-18.2019
          6616287
          31109962
          48a1abd2-9490-4c68-837e-e9720c333c2e
          Copyright © 2019 the authors
          History
          : 6 June 2018
          : 30 April 2019
          : 11 May 2019
          Categories
          Research Articles
          Behavioral/Cognitive

          aging,longitudinal changes,fMRI,functional segregation,functional connectivity

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