Functional Connectome of the Fetal Brain

Publication date

2019-12-04

Authors

Turk, EliseORCID 0000-0002-4802-6774
van den Heuvel, Marion I.
Benders, ManonISNI 0000000388026661
de Heus, RoelISNI 0000000393781872
Franx, ArieISNI 0000000396875911
Manning, Janessa H.
Hect, Jasmine L.
Hernandez-Andrade, Edgar
Hassan, Sonia S.
Romero, Roberto

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

Large-scale functional connectome formation and reorganization is apparent in the second trimester of pregnancy, making it a crucial and vulnerable time window in connectome development. Here we identified which architectural principles of functional connectome organization are initiated before birth, and contrast those with topological characteristics observed in the mature adult brain. A sample of 105 pregnant women participated in human fetal resting-state fMRI studies (fetal gestational age between 20 and 40 weeks). Connectome analysis was used to analyze weighted network characteristics of fetal macroscale brain wiring. We identified efficient network attributes, common functional modules, and high overlap between the fetal and adult brain network. Our results indicate that key features of the functional connectome are present in the second and third trimesters of pregnancy. Understanding the organizational principles of fetal connectome organization may bring opportunities to develop markers for early detection of alterations of brain function.

Keywords

brain development, fetal, functional connectivity, prenatal, resting-state fMRI, Taverne, General Neuroscience, Journal Article

Citation

Turk, E, van den Heuvel, M I, Benders, M J, de Heus, R, Franx, A, Manning, J H, Hect, J L, Hernandez-Andrade, E, Hassan, S S, Romero, R, Kahn, R S, Thomason, M E & van den Heuvel, M P 2019, 'Functional Connectome of the Fetal Brain', Journal of Neuroscience, vol. 39, no. 49, pp. 9716-9724. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2891-18.2019