Abstract
The present study explored differences in dendritic/spine extent across a number of human cortical regions. Specifically, the basilar dendrites/spines of supragranular pyramidal cells were examined in eight Brodmann's areas (BA) arranged according to Benson's (1993, Behav Neurol 6:75-81) functional hierarchy: primary cortex (somatosensory, BA3-1-2; motor, BA4), unimodal cortex (Wernicke's area, BA22; Broca's area, BA44), heteromodal cortex (supplementary motor area, BA6b; angular gyrus, BA39), and supramodal cortex (superior frontopolar zone, BA10; inferior frontopolar zone, BA11). To capture more general aspects of regional variability, primary and unimodal areas were designated as low integrative regions; heteromodal and supramodal areas were designated as high integrative regions. Tissue was obtained from the left hemisphere of 10 neurologically normal individuals (Mage = 38±20 years; 5 males, 5 females) and stained with a modified rapid Golgi technique. Ten neurons were sampled from each cortical region (N = 800) and evaluated according to total dendritic length, mean segment length, dendritic segment count, dendritic spine number, and dendritic spine density.
Despite considerable inter-individual variation, there were significant
differences across the eight Brodmann's areas and between the high and low integrative
regions for all dendritic and spine measures. Dendritic systems in primary and
unimodal regions were consistently less complex than in heteromodal and supramodal
areas. The range within these rankings was substantial, with total dendritic
length in BA10 being 31% greater than that in BA3-1-2, and dendritic spine number
being 69% greater. These findings demonstrate that cortical regions involved
in the early stages of processing (e.g., primary sensory areas) generally exhibit
less complex dendritic/spine systems than those regions involved in the later
stages of information processing (e.g., prefrontal cortex). This dendritic progression
appears to reflect significant differences in the nature of cortical processing,
with spine-dense neurons at hierarchically higher association levels integrating
a broader range of synaptic input than those at lower cortical levels.
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