Three macaque monkeys and 13 healthy human volunteers underwent diffusion tensor MRI with a 3 Tesla scanner for diffusion tract tracing (DTT) reconstruction of callosal bundles from different areas. In six macaque monkeys and three human subjects, the length of fiber tracts was obtained from histological data and combined with information on the distribution of axon diameter, so as to estimate callosal conduction delays from different areas. The results showed that in monkeys, the spectrum of tract lengths obtained with DTT closely matches that estimated from histological reconstruction of axons labeled with an anterogradely transported tracer. For each sector of the callosum, we obtained very similar conduction delays regardless of whether conduction distance was obtained from tractography or from histological analysis of labeled axons. This direct validation of DTT measurements by histological methods in monkeys was a prerequisite for the computation of the callosal conduction distances and delays in humans, which we had previously obtained by extrapolating the length of callosal axons from that of the monkey, proportionally to the brain volumes in the two species. For this analysis, we used the distribution of axon diameters from four different sectors of the corpus callosum. As in monkeys, in humans the shortest callosal conduction delays were those of motor, somatosensory, and premotor areas; the longer ones were those of temporal, parietal, and visual areas. These results provide the first histological validation of anatomical data about connection length in the primate brain based on DTT imaging. © 2013 the authors.
Diameter, length, speed, and conduction delay of callosal axons in macaque monkeys and humans: Comparing data from histology and magnetic resonance imaging diffusion tractography / Caminiti, Roberto; Carducci, Filippo; Piervincenzi, C.; BATTAGLIA MAYER, Alessandra; Confalone, G.; Visco Comandini, F.; Pantano, Patrizia; Innocenti, G. M.. - In: THE JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE. - ISSN 0270-6474. - STAMPA. - 33:36(2013), pp. 14501-14511. [10.1523/jneurosci.0761-13.2013]
Diameter, length, speed, and conduction delay of callosal axons in macaque monkeys and humans: Comparing data from histology and magnetic resonance imaging diffusion tractography
CAMINITI, Roberto;CARDUCCI, Filippo;C. Piervincenzi;BATTAGLIA MAYER, Alessandra;PANTANO, Patrizia;
2013
Abstract
Three macaque monkeys and 13 healthy human volunteers underwent diffusion tensor MRI with a 3 Tesla scanner for diffusion tract tracing (DTT) reconstruction of callosal bundles from different areas. In six macaque monkeys and three human subjects, the length of fiber tracts was obtained from histological data and combined with information on the distribution of axon diameter, so as to estimate callosal conduction delays from different areas. The results showed that in monkeys, the spectrum of tract lengths obtained with DTT closely matches that estimated from histological reconstruction of axons labeled with an anterogradely transported tracer. For each sector of the callosum, we obtained very similar conduction delays regardless of whether conduction distance was obtained from tractography or from histological analysis of labeled axons. This direct validation of DTT measurements by histological methods in monkeys was a prerequisite for the computation of the callosal conduction distances and delays in humans, which we had previously obtained by extrapolating the length of callosal axons from that of the monkey, proportionally to the brain volumes in the two species. For this analysis, we used the distribution of axon diameters from four different sectors of the corpus callosum. As in monkeys, in humans the shortest callosal conduction delays were those of motor, somatosensory, and premotor areas; the longer ones were those of temporal, parietal, and visual areas. These results provide the first histological validation of anatomical data about connection length in the primate brain based on DTT imaging. © 2013 the authors.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.