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Longitudinal microstructural changes in 18 amygdala nuclei resonate with cortical circuits and phenomics

Communications Biology, ISSN: 2399-3642, Vol: 7, Issue: 1, Page: 477
2024
  • 1
    Citations
  • 0
    Usage
  • 9
    Captures
  • 1
    Mentions
  • 0
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Citations
    1
  • Captures
    9
  • Mentions
    1
    • News Mentions
      1
      • News
        1

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School of Computer Science Researchers Have Published New Study Findings on Biology (Longitudinal microstructural changes in 18 amygdala nuclei resonate with cortical circuits and phenomics)

2024 MAY 07 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Health & Medicine Daily -- Investigators discuss new findings in biology. According to

Article Description

The amygdala nuclei modulate distributed neural circuits that most likely evolved to respond to environmental threats and opportunities. So far, the specific role of unique amygdala nuclei in the context processing of salient environmental cues lacks adequate characterization across neural systems and over time. Here, we present amygdala nuclei morphometry and behavioral findings from longitudinal population data (>1400 subjects, age range 40-69 years, sampled 2-3 years apart): the UK Biobank offers exceptionally rich phenotyping along with brain morphology scans. This allows us to quantify how 18 microanatomical amygdala subregions undergo plastic changes in tandem with coupled neural systems and delineating their associated phenome-wide profiles. In the context of population change, the basal, lateral, accessory basal, and paralaminar nuclei change in lockstep with the prefrontal cortex, a region that subserves planning and decision-making. The central, medial and cortical nuclei are structurally coupled with the insular and anterior-cingulate nodes of the salience network, in addition to the MT/V5, basal ganglia, and putamen, areas proposed to represent internal bodily states and mediate attention to environmental cues. The central nucleus and anterior amygdaloid area are longitudinally tied with the inferior parietal lobule, known for a role in bodily awareness and social attention. These population-level amygdala-brain plasticity regimes in turn are linked with unique collections of phenotypes, ranging from social status and employment to sleep habits and risk taking. The obtained structural plasticity findings motivate hypotheses about the specific functions of distinct amygdala nuclei in humans.

Bibliographic Details

Ghanem, Karam; Saltoun, Karin; Suvrathan, Aparna; Draganski, Bogdan; Bzdok, Danilo

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Medicine; Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology; Agricultural and Biological Sciences

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