Abstract

Autism has been linked with the changes in brain connectivity that disrupt neural communication, especially involving frontal networks. Pathological changes in white matter are evident in adults with autism, particularly affecting axons below the anterior cingulate cortices (ACC). It is still unknown whether axon pathology appears early or late in development and whether it changes or not from childhood through adulthood. To address these questions, we examined typical and pathological development of about 1 million axons in post-mortem brains of children, adolescents, and adults with and without autism (ages 3–67 years). We used high-resolution microscopy to systematically sample and study quantitatively the fine structure of myelinated axons in the white matter below ACC. We provide novel evidence of changes in the density, size and trajectories of ACC axons in typical postnatal development from childhood through adulthood. Against the normal profile of axon development, our data revealed lower density of myelinated axons that connect ACC with neighboring cortices in children with autism. In the course of development the proportion of thin axons, which form short-range pathways, increased significantly in individuals with autism, but remained flat in controls. In contrast, the relative proportion of thick axons, which form long-range pathways, increased from childhood to adulthood in the control group, but decreased in autism. Our findings provide a timeline for profound changes in axon density and thickness below ACC that affect axon physiology in a direction suggesting bias in short over distant neural communication in autism. Importantly, measures of axon density, myelination, and orientation provide white matter anisotropy/diffusivity estimates at the level of single axons. The structural template established can be used to compare with measures obtained from imaging in living subjects, and guide analysis of functional and structural imaging data from humans for comparison with pathological states.

Highlights

  • Autism spectrum disorders (ASD) have been linked with the changes in brain connectivity that disrupt neural communication [4, 5, 23, 79]

  • We previously found that the white matter below the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) in the brains of adults with ASD has more thin axons that connect ACC with the nearby areas and fewer thick axons that extend over long distances [79, 80, 84]

  • We provide direct evidence for typical and pathological changes in ACC white matter pathways with age

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Summary

Introduction

Autism spectrum disorders (ASD) have been linked with the changes in brain connectivity that disrupt neural communication [4, 5, 23, 79]. We previously found that the white matter below the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) in the brains of adults with ASD has more thin axons that connect ACC with the nearby areas and fewer thick axons that extend over long distances [79, 80, 84]. These findings revealed pathology in the fine structure of axons in adults with ASD, but it is unknown whether the changes appear early and persist or change in the course of development. Comparison with adults may provide insight about the developmental trajectory for both typical and disrupted neural communication

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