Birth Spurs a Surge in Brain Connectivity

Summary: Brain imaging of fetuses and infants reveals a rapid increase in functional brain connectivity at birth, aiding adaptation to the external world. Researchers observed distinct growth patterns, with subcortical, sensorimotor, and superior frontal regions undergoing major reorganizations.

These findings highlight the role of specific brain networks in early development and their sensitivity to environmental factors. The study lays the groundwork for exploring how prenatal adversity, prematurity, or sex differences shape brain development. Understanding these processes provides insights into early life brain adaptability and the formation of neural networks.

Key Facts:

  • Birth triggers dramatic reorganization in subcortical, sensorimotor, and superior frontal brain networks.
  • Functional connectivity changes are region-specific, with some areas showing minimal growth while others experience significant increases.
  • Subcortical networks enhance communication efficiency, acting as central hubs for neural information relay.

Source: PLOS

Brain-imaging data collected from fetuses and infants has revealed a rapid surge in functional connectivity between brain regions on a global scale at birth, possibly reflecting neural processes that support the brain’s ability to adapt to the external world, according to a study published November 19th, in the open-access journal PLOS Biology led by Lanxin Ji and Moriah Thomason from the New York University School of Medicine, USA.

Understanding the sequence and timing of brain functional network development at the beginning of human life is critical. Yet many questions remain regarding how human brain functional networks emerge and develop during the birth transition.

This shows a baby and a brain.
In particular, further studies could reveal how factors such as sex, prematurity, and prenatal adversity interact with the timing and growth patterns of children’s brain network development. Credit: Neuroscience News

To fill this knowledge gap, Thomason and colleagues leveraged a large functional magnetic resonance imaging dataset to model developmental trajectories of brain functional networks spanning 25 to 55 weeks of post-conceptual gestational age. The final sample included 126 fetal scans and 58 infant scans from 140 subjects.

The researchers observed distinct growth patterns in different regions, showing that neural changes accompanying the birth transition are not uniform across the brain. Some areas exhibited minimal changes in resting-state functional connectivity (RSFC) — correlations between blood oxygen level-dependent signals between brain regions when no explicit task is being performed.

But other areas showed dramatic changes in RSFC at birth. The subcortical network, sensorimotor network, and superior frontal network stand out as regions that undergo rapid reorganization during this developmental stage.

Additional analysis highlighted the subcortical network as the only region that exhibited a significant increase in communication efficiency within neighboring nodes. The subcortical network represents a central hub, relaying nearly all incoming and outgoing information to and from the cortex and mediating communication between cortical areas.

On the other hand, there was a gradual increase in global efficiency in sensorimotor and parietal-frontal regions throughout the fetal to neonatal period, possibly reflecting the establishment or strengthening of connections as well as the elimination of redundant connections.

According to the authors, this work unveils fundamental aspects of early brain development and lays the foundation for future research on the influence of environmental factors on this process.

In particular, further studies could reveal how factors such as sex, prematurity, and prenatal adversity interact with the timing and growth patterns of children’s brain network development.

The authors add, “This study for the first time documents the significant change of brain functional networks over the birth transition.

“We observe that growth patterns are regionally specific, with some areas of the functional connectome showing minimal changes, while others exhibit a dramatic increase at birth.”

About this neurodevelopment research news

Author: Claire Turner
Source: PLOS
Contact: Claire Turner – PLOS
Image: The image is credited to Neuroscience News

Original Research: Open access.
Trajectories of human brain functional connectome maturation across the birth transition” by Lanxin Ji et al. PLOS Biology


Abstract

Trajectories of human brain functional connectome maturation across the birth transition

Understanding the sequence and timing of brain functional network development at the beginning of human life is critically important from both normative and clinical perspectives. Yet, we presently lack rigorous examination of the longitudinal emergence of human brain functional networks over the birth transition.

Leveraging a large, longitudinal perinatal functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data set, this study models developmental trajectories of brain functional networks spanning 25 to 55 weeks of post-conceptual gestational age (GA).

The final sample includes 126 fetal scans (GA = 31.36 ± 3.83 weeks) and 58 infant scans (GA = 48.17 ± 3.73 weeks) from 140 unique subjects. In this study, we document the developmental changes of resting-state functional connectivity (RSFC) over the birth transition, evident at both network and graph levels.

We observe that growth patterns are regionally specific, with some areas showing minimal RSFC changes, while others exhibit a dramatic increase at birth.

Examples with birth-triggered dramatic change include RSFC within the subcortical network, within the superior frontal network, within the occipital-cerebellum joint network, as well as the cross-hemisphere RSFC between the bilateral sensorimotor networks and between the bilateral temporal network.

Our graph analysis further emphasized the subcortical network as the only region of the brain exhibiting a significant increase in local efficiency around birth, while a concomitant gradual increase was found in global efficiency in sensorimotor and parietal-frontal regions throughout the fetal to neonatal period.

This work unveils fundamental aspects of early brain development and lays the foundation for future work on the influence of environmental factors on this process.

Join our Newsletter
I agree to have my personal information transferred to AWeber for Neuroscience Newsletter ( more information )
Sign up to receive our recent neuroscience headlines and summaries sent to your email once a day, totally free.
We hate spam and only use your email to contact you about newsletters. You can cancel your subscription any time.