| Literature DB >> 28607055 |
Laura Ortiz-Terán1,2, Ibai Diez1,3, Tomás Ortiz4, David L Perez5,6,7, Jose Ignacio Aragón8, Victor Costumero9, Alvaro Pascual-Leone10, Georges El Fakhri1,2, Jorge Sepulcre11,2,7.
Abstract
Sensory deprivation reorganizes neurocircuits in the human brain. The biological basis of such neuroplastic adaptations remains elusive. In this study, we applied two complementary graph theory-based functional connectivity analyses, one to evaluate whole-brain functional connectivity relationships and the second to specifically delineate distributed network connectivity profiles downstream of primary sensory cortices, to investigate neural reorganization in blind children compared with sighted controls. We also examined the relationship between connectivity changes and neuroplasticity-related gene expression profiles in the cerebral cortex. We observed that multisensory integration areas exhibited enhanced functional connectivity in blind children and that this reorganization was spatially associated with the transcription levels of specific members of the cAMP Response Element Binding protein gene family. Using systems-level analyses, this study advances our understanding of human neuroplasticity and its genetic underpinnings following sensory deprivation.Entities:
Keywords: CREB family; blindness; children; functional connectivity; neuroplasticity
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28607055 PMCID: PMC5495230 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1619121114
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205