Toggle light / dark theme

Get the latest international news and world events from around the world.

Log in for authorized contributors

Population-level age effects on the white matter structure subserving cognitive flexibility in the human brain

New in eNeuro from Wolfe et al: Brain structures related to shifting between tasks or updating information about the environment show signs of deterioration in late adulthood.

▶️


Cognitive flexibility, a mental process crucial for adaptive behavior, involves multi-scale functioning across several neuronal organization levels. While the neural underpinnings of flexibility have been studied for decades, limited knowledge exists about the structure and age-related differentiation of the white matter subserving brain regions implicated in cognitive flexibility. This study investigated the population-level relationship between cognitive flexibility and properties of white matter across two periods of human adulthood, aiming to discern how these associations vary over different life stages and brain tracts among men and women. We propose a novel framework to study age effects in brain structure-function associations. First, a meta-analysis was conducted to identify neural regions associated with cognitive flexibility. Next, the white matter projections of these neural regions were traced through the Human Connectome Project tractography template to identify the white matter structure associated with cognitive flexibility. Then, a cohort analysis was performed to characterize myelin-related macromolecular features using a subset of the UK Biobank magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data, which has a companion functional/behavioral dataset. We found that the wiring of cognitive flexibility is defined by a subset of brain tracts, which present undifferentiated features early in adulthood and significantly differentiated types in later life. These MRI-derived properties are correlated with individual subprocesses of cognition, which are closely related to cognitive flexibility function. In late life, myelin-related homogeneity of specific white matter tracts implicated in cognitive flexibility declines with age, a phenomenon not observed in early life. Our findings support the age-related differentiation of white matter tracts implicated in cognitive flexibility as a natural substrate of adaptive cognitive function.

Significance Statement Cognitive flexibility function facilitates adaptation to environmental demands. Brain changes affecting structural organization during the lifespan are theorized to impact cognitive flexibility. This study characterizes how the brain’s connectivity is correlated with cognitive flexibility function throughout adulthood. By analyzing myelin-related properties of white matter, this study found that certain parts of the brain’s wiring related to cognitive flexibility become more differentiated with advanced age. These age-related features appear as a natural characteristic of the human brain that may impact specific aspects of adaptive thinking, like shifting between tasks or updating information.

Abstract: Helping alveolar macrophages live to fight another day during viral #pneumonia:

Joseph P. Mizgerd & team provide a Commentary on Christina Malainou et al.: https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI185390


2Department of Virology, Immunology, and Microbiology.

3Department of Medicine, and.

4Department of Biochemistry and Cell Biology, Boston University Chobanian and Avedisian School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.

Uniform Amyloid Thresholds Across Populations

This diagnostic study validates the biological comparability of brain amyloid thresholds used in AlzheimerDisease diagnostics across racial and ethnic subgroups of older adults, with no significant differences by sex or APOE4 status.

Further research should determine whether uniform thresholds yield comparable prognostic utility in clinical practice.

How does HSV-2 shedding affect immunity in female genital tract tissues?

Here, Jennifer M. Lund & team report immune cells mobilize and co-localize in the vaginal epithelium, expressing cytotoxic, inflammatory and immunoregulatory genes that may promote tissue homeostasis to limit damage:

The image shows visualization of cells on a representative tissue section for spatial transcriptomics.


Address correspondence to: Jennifer M. Lund, 1,100 Fairview Ave. N., E5-110, Seattle, Washington 98,109, USA. Phone: 206.667.2217; Email: jlund@fredhutch.org. Or to: Jairam R. Lingappa, 908 Jefferson St., Box 359,927, Seattle, Washington 98,104, USA. Phone: 206.520.3822; Email: lingappa@uw.edu.

Coronary Computed Tomography Angiography in Prediction of First Coronary Events

Adding coronary CT angiography (CCTA) data to traditional risk scores and coronary artery calcium scoring improved risk prediction for first coronary events over nearly 8 years of follow-up.

While the clinical impact was modest in a low-risk population, CCTA enhanced risk discrimination and reclassification, particularly among those considered low risk by conventional models.


This cohort study assesses whether coronary computed tomography angiography improves risk prediction beyond traditional risk factors and coronary artery calcium score in identifying individuals at risk of first coronary events.

Abstract: Secondary bacterial infections are a common complication in influenza A infection, but targets for prevention are lacking

Secondary bacterial infections are a common complication in influenza A infection, but targets for prevention are lacking.

Here, Susanne Herold & team suggest that targeting neutrophil-driven alveolar macrophage death in severe influenza pneumonia strengthens host defense and prevents the transition to secondary bacterial infection:

The figure shows leukocyte infiltration in mouse lung tissue caused by pneumococcal infection a week after influenza A infection.


1Department of Medicine V, Internal Medicine, Infectious Diseases and Infection Control, Universities of Giessen and Marburg Lung Center (UGMLC), member of the German Center for Lung Research (DZL), member of the German Center for Infection Research (DZIF), Justus Liebig University Giessen, Giessen, Germany.

2Institute of Lung Health (ILH), Justus Liebig University Giessen, Giessen, Germany.

3Excellence Cluster Cardio-Pulmonary Institute (CPI), Hessen, Germany.

Voxelizing the Human Brain

Dr. Martin Picard tells the ‘story behind the paper’ for “A human brain map of mitochondrial respiratory capacity and diversity”. An amazing effort with a valuable dataset as the result!

(https://martinpicard.substack.com/p/voxelizing-the-human-brain)


This is the story of how we produced the first brain map of mitochondria—or the human brain bioenergetic landscape. The paper was published in the journal Nature.

/* */