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Brain Development

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Title: Brain Development


1
Brain Development Plasticity
  • Dr. Elizabeth Sheppard

2
Learning objectives
  • Consider the role of brain development in the
    study of childhood
  • cognitive disorders
  • General principles of brain development
  • Influences on brain development
  • Prenatal brain development
  • Structural features
  • Cellular basis (proliferation, migration,
    differentiation)
  • Disruptions to prenatal development
  • Postnatal brain development
  • Dendritic aborisation
  • Synaptogenesis
  • Myelination
  • Specialisation or functional plasticity?

3
Developmental Cognitive NeuropsychologyThe
Neuro Dimension
  • Why look at brain development?
  • DCN how are cognitive functions may be
    disordered during development?
  • Adult Cognitive Neuropsychology has shown there
    to be a close relationship between brain and
    behaviour (e.g., localisation of function).
    Assumes breakdown within a stable or static
    system.
  • But development dynamic process. Complex
    interaction between neurological, cognitive, and
    psychosocial factors.
  • Need to understand the neural mechanisms involved
    in brain development to fully appreciate the
    relationship between the developing brain and
    cognitive functions.

4
Developmental Cognitive NeuropsychologyThe
Neuro Dimension
  • Key aspects of CNS development for DCN
  • 1.Is there a relationship between changes in
    brain structure/function and cognitive
    development?
  • 2.Recovery of impaired cognitive functions
    Higher during certain periods of brain
    development? Is neural plasticity simply a
    response to insults or a driving mechanism in
    development?
  • 3.What is the role of environmental influences
    on brain maturation? Can changes in environment
    influence cognitive development and
    rehabilitation? What are the negative
    consequences of disadvantaged environments?

5
Brain Development General Principles
  • 1.) Protracted period of brain development
  • The CNS starts to develop early in gestation and
    continues through
  • infancy and childhood to adolescence and into
    adulthood.
  • Prenatal development ? structural formation
  • Postnatal development ? elaboration of CNS

  • (connectivity)

6
Brain DevelopmentGeneral principals
  • 1.) Protracted period of brain development
  • Ongoing process throughout gestation and
    childhood.
  • Unique to humans.
  • Fastest rate occurs prenatally. Approx. 250,000
    new brain cells formed every minute (Papalia
    Olds, 1992).
  • Structural morphology of brain complete at birth
    but growth continues postnatally (birth approx.
    400 g early adulthood (peaking 18-30 years)
    approx. 1500 g gradual decline)
  • Postnatal increase in brain weight due to
    differentiation, growth and maturation of
    existing neurons (not formation of new neurons).

7
Brain DevelopmentGeneral principals
  • Stages of human brain development throughout
    gestation.
  • About day 40 of embryonic life CNS begins to
    develop.
  • Around day 100, brain is recognisable in its
    mature form.
  • (from Johnson, 1997)

8
Developmental Cognitive NeuropsychologyThe
Neuro Dimension
  • 1.) Protracted period of brain development
  • 2.) Properties of brain development
  • Nature of brain development is believed to be
  • hierarchical (cerebellar/brain stem areas, then
    posterior areas, and lastly anterior regions,
    especially frontal cortex)
  • stepwise (growth spurts in weeks 24-25 gestation
    (completion of neuronal generation), early
    infancy (dendritic synaptic development
    myelination), then again at 7-10 years, and in
    early adolescence)
  • stage-like (follows a series of precise and
    genetically pre-determined stages partially
    pre-requisite sequence of complicated and
    over-lapping processes).

9
Brain DevelopmentGeneral principals
  • 1.) Protracted period of brain development
  • 2.) Properties of brain development
  • 3.) Two major processes operate
  • Process of addition
  • ongoing accumulation or growth
  • E.G.1. myelination (stage-like progression)
  • E.G.2. dendritic aborisation (continual
    progression)
  • Process of regression
  • initial overproduction followed by elimination of
    redundant elements
  • E.G.1. Number of neurons prenatally is in excess
    of number required by mature brain. Redundant
    neurons die off during stage of differentiation.
  • E.G.2. Number of synapses formed postnatally
  • Not considered detrimental. Fine-tuning of system.

10
Brain DevelopmentGeneral principals
  • 1.) Protracted period of brain development
  • 2.) Properties of brain development
  • 3.) Two major processes operate
  • 4.) Critical or sensitive periods
  • Stage in developmental sequence during which a
    behavioural function experiences major
    progression
  • If progression does not occur appropriately then
    it may never occur.
  • E.G. Visual deprivation during critical periods
    results in irreversible effects on ongoing
    maturation of particular visual processes
    (Blakemore, 1974).
  • E.G.2. In humans, removal of cataracts after
    early infancy affects particular visual processes
    (e.g., face processing, LeGrand et al., 2003)

11
Brain DevelopmentInfluences
  • Various influences can impact on brain
    development. These include
  • Direct CNS injury or insult (e.g., stroke,
    tumour, trauma)
  • Environmental factors (e.g., malnutrition,
    sensory deprivation)
  • Environmental toxins (e.g., lead, radiation)
  • Psychosocial factors (e.g., quality of
    mother-child relationship, level of available
    stimulation, social support structures, access to
    resources etc.)

12
Brain DevelopmentInfluences
  • Impact may not be static. Cascading influences on
    brain maturation may occur. For example
  • meningitis or febrile convulsions ? hippocampal
    sclerosis ?
  • epilepsy (Ounstead et al., 1966)
  • cranial irradiation (treatment for cerebral
    tumour or
  • leukaemia) ? delayed cerebral pathology,
    especially cerebral
  • calcifications and other white matter pathology
    (Matsumoto et al., 1995 Paakko et al., 1992)

13
Prenatal CNS DevelopmentStructural features
  • Prenatal brain development resembles that of
    other vertebrates.
  • Soon after conception, the fertilized cell
    undergoes process of rapid cell division ?
    cluster of proliferating cells called the
    blastocyst.
  • Within a few days, blastocyst differentiates into
    three-layered structure called the embryonic
    disc.

14
Prenatal CNS DevelopmentStructural features
  • Embryonic disc further differentiates into major
    organic systems
  • Endoderm (inner layer) ? internal organs (e.g.,
    digestive etc)
  • Mesoderm (middle layer) ? skeletal muscular
    structures
  • - Ectoderm (outer layer) ? skin surface
    nervous system

From http//www.howe.k12.ok.us/
15
Prenatal CNS DevelopmentStructural features
  • CNS begins with a process called neurolation.
  • Portion of ectoderm folds in on itself ? hollow
    cylinder called the neural tube.
  • Disruption ? serious structural abnormalities
  • incomplete closure of spinal cord
  • (myelomeningocele) ? spina bifida
  • incomplete closure of neural tube
  • (anencephaly) ? absent skull vault i.e.
  • no brain (incompatible with life)

Spina Bifida Association - Wisconsin
16
Prenatal CNS DevelopmentStructural features
  • Neural tube differentiates along three
    dimensions
  • Length ? major subdivisions of CNS (forebrain
    midbrain, spinal cord)
  • Circumference ? sensory motor systems
  • Radius ? different layering patterns cell types

17
Prenatal CNS DevelopmentStructural features
  • Disruption of neural tube differentiation?
    failure of formation of structural divisions.
    Include
  • - E.G.1. Failure to form two cerebral hemispheres
    (holoprosencephaly)
  • - E.G.2. Incomplete fusion of the skull
    (craniosynostosis)

Holoprosencephaly Alobar From
http//www.urmc.rochester.edu
Lobar holoprosencephaly From http//uiowa.edu)
18
Prenatal CNS DevelopmentCellular basis
  • CNS contains two main classes of cells
  • Neurons ? produced by division of neuroblasts
  • Glial cells ? produced by division of glioblasts
  • Neurons
  • Basic functional (computational) unit of the CNS
  • Transmit impulses within complex network of
    interconnecting brain cells
  • Enormous variety of neurons, depending on
    function - all with similar basic structure

19
Prenatal CNS DevelopmentCellular basis
3.
  • Four primary components
  • cell body
  • axon
  • dendrites
  • presynaptic terminals
  • (from Kolb Whishaw, 1996)

1.
2.
4.
20
Prenatal CNS DevelopmentCellular basis
  • Structure of neurons comprise four primary
    components
  • the cell body (metabolic functions of neuron,
    holds RNA DNA)
  • the axon, long projection from cell body
    (conducts nerve impulses away from cell body.
    Mature axon covered by coating of myelin ? rapid
    neural transmission)
  • the dendrites, branch off from cell body (receive
    and conduct impulses from other neurons towards
    cell body. Dendritic spines locus of the synapse
    ? information is transmitted between neurons)
  • the presynaptic terminals (neurotransmitters are
    stored and released, cross the synaptic cleft ?
    activate neurons at postsynapse)

21
Prenatal CNS DevelopmentCellular basis
  • Glial cells
  • Supportive and nutrient role
  • Nine times as many glial cells as neurons
  • Lack axons
  • Several subtypes, including
  • Astrocytes (form blood-brain barrier, support
    cellular structure of brain, direct migration of
    neurons, clean up and plug injury sites)
  • Oligodendrocytes (speed up neural transmission by
    coating axons with myelin)
  • Microglia (clean up tissue around injury sites,
    primarily in grey matter)
  • Relatively immature in early stages of brain
    development. Continue to generate with increased
    CNS maturity.

22
Prenatal CNS DevelopmentCellular basis
  • Prenatal brain development follows a genetically
    predetermined sequence involving three major
    mechanisms
  • Proliferation - cell generation
  • Migration - young neurons move to their permanent
    locations.
  • Two forms (i) Passive cell displacement -
    oldest cells pushed away from newer cells ?
    outside-to- inside spatiotemporal gradient.
  • (ii) Active migration - young cells move past
  • previously generated cells ? inside-out
    gradient.
  • Differentiation - complex process in which cells
    become committed to specialised systems.
    Involves (i) development of cell bodies (ii)
    selective cell death (iii) dendritic and axonal
    growth (iv) formation of synaptic connections

23
Prenatal CNS DevelopmentCellular basis
  • Major developmental processes occurring prenatal
    brain development.
  • Each successive process commences prior to the
    completion of the previous one.
  • Final processes are heterochronous across
    cortical areas.
  • (from Anderson et al.,2001)

24
Brain DevelopmentInfluences
  • Risk factors affecting prenatal brain development
    include
  • Maternal stress and age
  • Maternal health (e.g., history of infection,
    rubella, AIDS, herpes simplex)
  • Maternal drug and alcohol addiction (smoking,
    alcohol, marijuana, cocaine, heroin)
  • Environmental toxins (lead, radiation, trauma)

25
Prenatal CNS DevelopmentDisruptions
  • Interruptions to the major developmental
    processes of prenatal brain development can have
    severe consequences for ongoing development
    (including cognitive development).
  • Timing of the insult may be more important to
    outcome than the nature and severity of the
    insult during prenatal development.
  • Earlier disruption ? impact on gross cerebral
    morphology
  • Later disruption ? impact on migrational activity
    neuronal differentiation

26
Prenatal CNS DevelopmentDisruptions
  • Examples of differences in timing of insult on
    prenatal brain development include
  • Induction (dorsal) weeks 3-4
  • Myelomeningocele (spina bifida). Failure of
    closure of the spinal cord. Arises from genetic
    or nutritional factors. Results in motor
    perceptual deficits.
  • Induction (ventral) weeks 5-6
  • Holoprosencephaly. Failure to form two
    hemispheres. Often genetic origin. Usually
    incompatible with life.
  • Proliferation 2-5 months
  • Microencephaly. Early cessation of cell division
    ? abnormally small head. Genetic or trauma
    factors, e.g., infection, fetal alcohol syndrome.
    Associated with low intellectual abilities.

27
Prenatal CNS DevelopmentDisruptions
  • Examples of differences in timing of insult on
    prenatal brain development include
  • Migration 2-5 months
  • Lissencephaly, Schizencephaly, Dysplasias
  • Differentiation
  • Porencephaly. Large cystic lesions, usually
    bilateral. Occurs at
  • 5-7 months gestation. Usually of
    traumatic/vascular/
  • infectious origin. Often results in retardation
    and epilepsy.

28
Prenatal CNS DevelopmentMalformations of
cortical development
  • Classical lissencephaly
  • smooth gyral pattern and
  • thickened cortex
  • migrational disorder
  • between weeks 11-13
  • severe mental retardation,
  • seizures, neuromotor
  • disorders.
  • (from Anderson et al., 2001)

29
Prenatal CNS DevelopmentMalformations of
cortical development
  • unilateral schizencephaly
  • grey matter-lined cleft in
  • right posterior frontal lobe
  • communicating with right
  • lateral ventricle
  • migration disorder at 8
  • weeks
  • mental retardation,
  • seizures, neuromotor
  • disorders.
  • (from Anderson et al., 2001)

30
Prenatal CNS DevelopmentMalformations of
cortical development
  • Focal cortical dysplasia
  • evidence of poor grey-
  • white matter differentiation
  • and low white matter signal in
  • the right hemisphere
  • migrational disorder with
  • multiple origins
  • results in epilepsy, learning
  • disability, schizophrenia.
  • (from Anderson et al., 2001)

31
Prenatal CNS DevelopmentMalformations of
cortical development
  • hemimegencephaly
  • markedly abnormal left
  • hemisphere with thickened,
  • irregular cortex, excessive
  • white matter, heterotopic
  • grey matter, and a dilated,
  • dysmorphic lateral ventrical
  • (from Anderson et al., 2001)

32
Postnatal DevelopmentCNS elaboration
  • Protracted process. Occurs throughout childhood
    and into adolescence.
  • Brain quadruples in size from birth to adulthood.
    Occurs not because of increase in number of
    neurons (which is established at birth) but
    because of three processes of elaboration
    (additive)
  • dendritic aborisation
  • synaptogenesis
  • myelination

33
Postnatal DevelopmentCNS elaboration
  • Dendritic aborisation
  • Additive process, no evidence of regression or
    pruning of dendrites (e.g., Huttenlocher, 1996)
  • Dendritic branching begins as early as 25-30
    gestation and continues until birth.
  • Major changes occur postnatally, including
    increased length and branching.
  • Most dramatic development occurs between
    postnatal weeks 5-21. Adult levels at 5-6 months
    (Becker et al., 1984).
  • Development in the frontal areas may continue
    until age 7 (Huttenlocher, 1996).
  • Environmental stimulation/deprivation can
    increase/hinder the process (e.g., Kolb, 1995).

34
Postnatal DevelopmentCNS elaboration
  • Cellular structure of visual cortex from birth to
    6 months. Shows increased connectivity in brain
    during this period. (From Johnson, 1997).

35
Postnatal DevelopmentCNS elaboration
  • Synaptogensis
  • Synaptic connections increase from birth, with
    bursts of rapid
  • growth at various stages within different
    cerebral regions
  • - V1 peak in density between 4-12 months (150
    of adult)
  • - A1 (Heschls gyrus) similar
  • - Prefrontal cortex density increase is much
    slower, peak only after first year
  • - Begins in 2nd trimester of gestation
    (Molliver et al., 1973)
  • Most development is postnatal
  • Regressive process (initial over-production then
    reduction)
  • Synapses initially unspecified in function
    (Huttenlocher, 1994)
  • As neural circuits emerge synapses become
    utilised in these
  • functional systems
  • Unspecified synapses regress, starting after 1
    year

36
Postnatal DevelopmentCNS elaboration
  • Synaptogensis
  • Relatively immune to environmental
    stimulation/deprivation
  • (Goldman-Rakic et al., 1997)
  • Parallel pattern of development of
    neurotransmitter levels
  • (Huttenlocher, 1994) i.e. although
    counter-intuitive, there is
  • some consistency in this rise-and-fall pattern
    of development
  • Redundancy of synapses may be associated with
    functional
  • plasticity (Huttenlocher, 1994).

37
Postnatal Development
Additive/Regressive Processes
  • Rise and fall of synaptic density for visual
    (open circles), auditory (filled circles) and
    prefrontal cortex (crossbars)
  • From Huttenlocher (2002)

38
Postnatal DevelopmentCNS elaboration
  • Myelination
  • Mostly postnatal process, with rapid development
    in first 3
  • years but continuing, at a slower pace, into
    second decade
  • (Valk Van der Knapp, 1992)
  • Hierarchical progression (e.g., Fuster, 1993)
  • proximal before distal
  • sensory before motor
  • projection before association
  • central before poles
  • posterior before anterior
  • Gradual increase in thickness of myelin sheaths
  • Rate varies across cerebral regions, with
    frontal lobes
  • becoming myelinated last
  • Disruption to process leads to reduced speed of
    response,
  • attention, processing capacity, IQ.

39
Brain DevelopmentInfluences
  • Risk factors affecting postnatal brain
    development include
  • Birth complications (e.g., anoxia, prematurity)
  • Nutrition
  • Cerebral infection
  • Environmental toxins (lead, radiation, trauma)
  • Environment experience (e.g. normal sensory
    experiences vs. sensory deprivation)

40
Human brain development Postnatal influences
  • Sensory deprivation of input affects synaptic
    density in kittens
  • From Huttenlocher (2002)

41
Specialisation or functional plasticity of the
cerebral cortex
  • How do different brain areas specialise?
  • Two major opposing views on functional
    specialisation within the
  • cerebral cortex
  • Prespecified functional organisation
  • - cortical differentiation begins
    prenatally with cortical structure and function
    established prior to postnatal
  • experience (Rakic, 1988), by
    intrinsic factors.
  • neuronal proliferation migration suggest
    neurons are
  • preprogrammed to form particular
    cerebral structures
  • that subsume particular functions
    (Johnson, 1997).

42
Specialisation or functional plasticity of the
cerebral cortex
  • Undifferentiated cortex
  • cortex is initially undifferentiated but becomes
    increasingly specialised in function throughout
    postnatal period (e.g., Killackey, 1990 OLeary,
    1989) due to extrinsic factors like input from
    other parts of brain
  • suggests cortical regions could subsume a variety
    of functions depending on the sensory input they
    receive.
  • if cerebral damage occurs before specialisation
    is complete functional localisation may be
    permanently altered.

43
Specialisation or functional plasticity of the
cerebral cortex
  • Considerable disagreement over these two
    viewpoints e.g. Temple vs. Johnson
  • Temple - plasticity is response to brain damage
    but not a driving force in development.
    Maturational account (preformist nativist)
    Areas come online at different points in
    development, according to a genetically specified
    plan.
  • - Johnson argues middle-ground position whereby
    large scale regions are prespecified, while
    establishment of small-scale functional areas
    require activity-dependent processes. Interactive
    Specialisation Account (neuroconstructivist)
    Experience is necessary to build functional
    long-range connections between areas that earlier
    in development are not connected as effectively.
    These connections drive specialisation mutually
    across areas.

44
Background Reading
  • Anderson, V., Northam, E., Hendy, J., Wrennall,
    J. (2001). Developmental Neuropsychology A
    Clinical Approach. Hove Psychology Press.
    Chapter 2.
  • Johnson, M.H. (2000). Developmental Cognitive
    Neuroscience. Oxford
  • Blackwell Publishers Ltd. Chapter 2.
  • Johnson, M.H., Munakata, Y., Gilmore, R.O.
    (Eds). (2002). Brain
  • Development and Cognition A Reader. Oxford
    Blackwell Publishing. Part II.
  • General principles of CNS development
    Nowakowski, R.S. Hayes, N.L.
  • Intrinsic and extrinsic determinants of
    neocortical parcellation A radial model Rakic,
    P.
  • Positrom Emission Tomography study of human brain
    functional development Chugani, H.T., Phelps,
    M.E. Mazziotta, J.C.
  • Morphmetric study of human cerebral cortex
    development Huttenlocher, P.R.

45
References
  • Anderson, V., Northam, E., Hendy, J.,
    Wrennall, J. (2001). Developmental
    Neuropsychology A
  • Clinical Approach. Hove Psychology Press.
  • Becker, L., Armstrong, D., Chan, F., Wood, M.
    (1984). Dendritic development in human occipital
  • cortical neurons. Developmental Brain
    Research, 13, 117-124.
  • Blakemore, C. (1974). Development of functional
    connections in the mammalian visual system.
    British
  • Medical Bulletin, 30, 152-157.
  • Fuster, J. (1993). Frontal lobes. Current
    Opinion in Neurobiology, 3, 160-165.
  • Goldman-Rakic, P.S. (1997). Development of
    cortical circuitry and cognitive functions. Child
  • Development, 58, 601-622.
  • Huttenlocher, P.R. (1994). Synaptogenesis in
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  • Human behaviour and the developing brain. New
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  • Huttenlocher, P.R. (1996). Morphometric study of
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  • Johnson, M.H. (1997). Developmental Cognitive
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  • Killackey, H. (1990). Neocortical expansion An
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  • Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2, 1-17.
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46
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