Abstract
Interhemispheric functional connectivity abnormalities are often reported in autism and it is thus not surprising that structural defects of the corpus callosum (CC) are consistently found using both traditional MRI and DTI techniques. Past DTI studies however, have subdivided the CC into 2 or 3 segments without regard for where fibers may project to within the cortex, thus placing limitations on our ability to understand the nature, timing and neurobehavioral impact of early CC abnormalities in autism. Leveraging a unique cohort of 97 toddlers (68 autism; 29 typical) we utilized a novel technique that identified seven CC tracts according to their cortical projections. Results revealed that younger (<2.5 years old), but not older toddlers with autism exhibited abnormally low mean, radial, and axial diffusivity values in the CC tracts connecting the occipital lobes and the temporal lobes. Fractional anisotropy and the cross sectional area of the temporal CC tract were significantly larger in young toddlers with autism. These findings indicate that water diffusion is more restricted and unidirectional in the temporal CC tract of young toddlers who develop autism. Such results may be explained by a potential overabundance of small caliber axons generated by excessive prenatal neural proliferation as proposed by previous genetic, animal model, and postmortem studies of autism. Furthermore, early diffusion measures in the temporal CC tract of the young toddlers were correlated with outcome measures of autism severity at later ages. These findings regarding the potential nature, timing, and location of early CC abnormalities in autism add to accumulating evidence, which suggests that altered inter-hemispheric connectivity, particularly across the temporal lobes, is a hallmark of the disorder.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 291-305 |
Number of pages | 15 |
Journal | Cortex |
Volume | 97 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Dec 2017 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© 2017 Elsevier Ltd
Funding
This study was supported by NIMH grant P50-MH081755 (E.C.), NIMH grant R01-MH36840 (E.C.), NIMH grant R01-MH080134 (K.P.), Autism Speaks (K.P.), Cure Autism Now (K.P), ISF grant 961/14 (I.D.), and GIF grant 2351 (I.D.). The authors thank S. Solso, K. Campbell, C. Ahrens-Barbeau, J.Young, M. Mayo, and S. Marinero for help with data collection, and all families who participated in research at the UC San Diego Autism Center. The authors have no conflicts of interest with regard to the presented work.
Funders | Funder number |
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National Institute of Mental Health | R01-MH080134, P50MH081755, R01-MH36840 |
Autism Speaks | |
Cure Starts Now Foundation | |
German-Israeli Foundation for Scientific Research and Development | 2351 |
Israel Science Foundation | 961/14 |
Keywords
- Autism
- Corpus callosum
- DTI
- Inter-hemispheric connectivity
- White matter
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