AUTHOR=Faskowitz Joshua , Puxeddu Maria Grazia , van den Heuvel Martijn P. , Mišić Bratislav , Yovel Yossi , Assaf Yaniv , Betzel Richard F. , Sporns Olaf
TITLE=Connectome topology of mammalian brains and its relationship to taxonomy and phylogeny
JOURNAL=Frontiers in Neuroscience
VOLUME=16
YEAR=2023
URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/neuroscience/articles/10.3389/fnins.2022.1044372
DOI=10.3389/fnins.2022.1044372
ISSN=1662-453X
ABSTRACT=
Network models of anatomical connections allow for the extraction of quantitative features describing brain organization, and their comparison across brains from different species. Such comparisons can inform our understanding of between-species differences in brain architecture and can be compared to existing taxonomies and phylogenies. Here we performed a quantitative comparative analysis using the MaMI database (Tel Aviv University), a collection of brain networks reconstructed from ex vivo diffusion MRI spanning 125 species and 12 taxonomic orders or superorders. We used a broad range of metrics to measure between-mammal distances and compare these estimates to the separation of species as derived from taxonomy and phylogeny. We found that within-taxonomy order network distances are significantly closer than between-taxonomy network distances, and this relation holds for several measures of network distance. Furthermore, to estimate the evolutionary divergence between species, we obtained phylogenetic distances across 10,000 plausible phylogenetic trees. The anatomical network distances were rank-correlated with phylogenetic distances 10,000 times, creating a distribution of coefficients that demonstrate significantly positive correlations between network and phylogenetic distances. Collectively, these analyses demonstrate species-level organization across scales and informational sources: we relate brain networks distances, derived from MRI, with evolutionary distances, derived from genotyping data.