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Hippocampal anterior- posterior shift in childhood and adolescence

  • Anna Plachti
  • , Robert D. Latzman
  • , Somayeh Maleki Balajoo
  • , Felix Hoffstaedter
  • , Kathrine Skak Madsen
  • , William Baare
  • , Hartwig R. Siebner
  • , Simon B. Eickhoff
  • , Sarah Genon
  • Research Centre Jülich
  • Copenhagen University Hospital
  • Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Limited
  • University of Copenhagen
  • Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf
  • University of Liege

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

Hippocampal-cortical networks play an important role in neurocognitive development. Applying the method of Connectivity-Based Parcellation (CBP) on hippocampal-cortical structural covariance (SC) networks computed from T1-weighted magnetic resonance images, we examined how the hippocampus differentiates into subregions during childhood and adolescence (N = 1105, 6–18 years). In late childhood, the hippocampus mainly differentiated along the anterior-posterior axis similar to previous reported functional differentiation patterns of the hippocampus. In contrast, in adolescence a differentiation along the medial-lateral axis was evident, reminiscent of the cytoarchitectonic division into cornu ammonis and subiculum. Further meta-analytical characterization of hippocampal subregions in terms of related structural co-maturation networks, behavioural and gene profiling suggested that the hippocampal head is related to higher order functions (e.g. language, theory of mind, autobiographical memory) in late childhood morphologically co-varying with almost the whole brain. In early adolescence but not in childhood, posterior subicular SC networks were associated with action-oriented and reward systems. The findings point to late childhood as an important developmental period for hippocampal head morphology and to early adolescence as a crucial period for hippocampal integration into action- and reward-oriented cognition. The latter may constitute a developmental feature that conveys increased propensity for addictive disorders.

Original languageEnglish
Article number102447
JournalProgress in Neurobiology
Volume225
ISSN0301-0082
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2023

Keywords

  • Adolescence
  • Childhood
  • Hippocampus
  • Structural covariance

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