Abstract

BackgroundAutism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) is a neurodevelopmental disorder associated with alterations in structural and functional coupling in gray matter. However, despite the detectability and modulation of brain signals in white matter, the structure-function coupling in white matter in autism remains less explored.MethodsIn this study, we investigated structural-functional coupling in white matter (WM) regions, by integrating diffusion tensor data that contain fiber orientation information from WM tracts, with functional connectivity tensor data that reflect local functional anisotropy information. Using functional and diffusion magnetic resonance images, we analyzed a cohort of 89 ASD and 63 typically developing (TD) individuals from the Autism Brain Imaging Data Exchange II (ABIDE-II). Subsequently, the associations between structural-functional coupling in WM regions and ASD severity symptoms assessed by Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule-2 were examined via supervised machine learning in an independent test cohort of 29 ASD individuals. Furthermore, we also compared the performance of multi-model features (i.e. structural-functional coupling) with single-model features (i.e. functional or structural models alone).ResultsIn the discovery cohort (ABIDE-II), individuals with ASD exhibited widespread reductions in structural-functional coupling in WM regions compared to TD individuals, particularly in commissural tracts (e.g. corpus callosum), association tracts (sagittal stratum), and projection tracts (e.g. internal capsule). Notably, supervised machine learning analysis in the independent test cohort revealed a significant correlation between these alterations in structural-functional coupling and ASD severity scores. Furthermore, compared to single-model features, the integration of multi-model features (i.e., structural-functional coupling) performed best in predicting ASD severity scores.ConclusionThis work provides novel evidence for atypical structural-functional coupling in ASD in white matter regions, further refining our understanding of the critical role of WM networks in the pathophysiology of ASD.

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