fbpx
Wikipedia

Cerebral cortex

The cerebral cortex, also known as the cerebral mantle,[1] is the outer layer of neural tissue of the cerebrum of the brain in humans and other mammals. The cerebral cortex mostly consists of the six-layered neocortex, with just 10% consisting of the allocortex.[2] It is separated into two cortices, by the longitudinal fissure that divides the cerebrum into the left and right cerebral hemispheres. The two hemispheres are joined beneath the cortex by the corpus callosum. The cerebral cortex is the largest site of neural integration in the central nervous system.[3] It plays a key role in attention, perception, awareness, thought, memory, language, and consciousness. The cerebral cortex is part of the brain responsible for cognition.

Cerebral cortex
Tissue slice from the brain of an adult macaque monkey (Macaca mulatta). The cerebral cortex is the outer layer depicted in dark violet. Source: BrainMaps.org
Golgi-stained neurons in the cortex
Details
Part ofCerebrum
Identifiers
Latincortex cerebri
MeSHD002540
NeuroNames39
NeuroLex IDbirnlex_1494
TA98A14.1.09.003
A14.1.09.301
TA25527, 5528
FMA61830
Anatomical terms of neuroanatomy
[edit on Wikidata]

In most mammals, apart from small mammals that have small brains, the cerebral cortex is folded, providing a greater surface area in the confined volume of the cranium. Apart from minimising brain and cranial volume, cortical folding is crucial for the brain circuitry and its functional organisation.[4] In mammals with small brains there is no folding and the cortex is smooth.[5][6]

A fold or ridge in the cortex is termed a gyrus (plural gyri) and a groove is termed a sulcus (plural sulci). These surface convolutions appear during fetal development and continue to mature after birth through the process of gyrification. In the human brain the majority of the cerebral cortex is not visible from the outside, but buried in the sulci.[7] The major sulci and gyri mark the divisions of the cerebrum into the lobes of the brain. The four major lobes are the frontal, parietal, occipital and temporal lobes. Other lobes are the limbic lobe, and the insular cortex often referred to as the insular lobe.

There are between 14 and 16 billion neurons in the human cerebral cortex.[3] These are organised into horizontal cortical layers, and radially into cortical columns and minicolumns. Cortical areas have specific functions such as movement in the motor cortex, and sight in the visual cortex. The motor cortex is primarily located in the precentral gyrus, and the visual cortex is located in the occipital lobe.

Structure edit

 
Lateral view of cerebrum showing several cortices

The cerebral cortex is the outer covering of the surfaces of the cerebral hemispheres and is folded into peaks called gyri, and grooves called sulci. In the human brain it is between 2 and 3-4 mm. thick,[8] and makes up 40% of the brain's mass.[3] 90% of the cerebral cortex is the six-layered neocortex whilst the other 10% made up of three/four-layered allocortex.[3] There are between 14 and 16 billion neurons in the cortex,[3] and these are organized radially in cortical columns, and minicolumns, in the horizontally organized layers of the cortex.[9][10]

The neocortex is separable into different regions of cortex known in the plural as cortices, and include the motor cortex and visual cortex. About two thirds of the cortical surface is buried in the sulci and the insular cortex is completely hidden. The cortex is thickest over the top of a gyrus and thinnest at the bottom of a sulcus.[11]

Folds edit

The cerebral cortex is folded in a way that allows a large surface area of neural tissue to fit within the confines of the neurocranium. When unfolded in the human, each hemispheric cortex has a total surface area of about 0.12 square metres (1.3 sq ft).[12] The folding is inward away from the surface of the brain, and is also present on the medial surface of each hemisphere within the longitudinal fissure. Most mammals have a cerebral cortex that is convoluted with the peaks known as gyri and the troughs or grooves known as sulci. Some small mammals including some small rodents have smooth cerebral surfaces without gyrification.[6]

Lobes edit

The larger sulci and gyri mark the divisions of the cortex of the cerebrum into the lobes of the brain.[8] There are four main lobes: the frontal lobe, parietal lobe, temporal lobe, and occipital lobe. The insular cortex is often included as the insular lobe.[13] The limbic lobe is a rim of cortex on the medial side of each hemisphere and is also often included.[14] There are also three lobules of the brain described: the paracentral lobule, the superior parietal lobule, and the inferior parietal lobule.

Thickness edit

For species of mammals, larger brains (in absolute terms, not just in relation to body size) tend to have thicker cortices.[15] The smallest mammals, such as shrews, have a neocortical thickness of about 0.5 mm; the ones with the largest brains, such as humans and fin whales, have thicknesses of 2–4 mm.[3][8] There is an approximately logarithmic relationship between brain weight and cortical thickness.[15]Magnetic resonance imaging of the brain (MRI) makes it possible to get a measure for the thickness of the human cerebral cortex and relate it to other measures. The thickness of different cortical areas varies but in general, sensory cortex is thinner than motor cortex.[16] One study has found some positive association between the cortical thickness and intelligence.[17] Another study has found that the somatosensory cortex is thicker in migraine patients, though it is not known if this is the result of migraine attacks, the cause of them or if both are the result of a shared cause.[18][19] A later study using a larger patient population reports no change in the cortical thickness in patients with migraine.[20] A genetic disorder of the cerebral cortex, whereby decreased folding in certain areas results in a microgyrus, where there are four layers instead of six, is in some instances seen to be related to dyslexia.[21]

Layers of neocortex edit

 
Diagram of layers pattern. Cells grouped on left, axonal layers on right.
 
Three drawings of cortical lamination by Santiago Ramon y Cajal, each showing a vertical cross-section, with the surface of the cortex at the top. Left: Nissl-stained visual cortex of a human adult. Middle: Nissl-stained motor cortex of a human adult. Right: Golgi-stained cortex of a 1+12 month-old infant. The Nissl stain shows the cell bodies of neurons; the Golgi stain shows the dendrites and axons of a random subset of neurons.
 
Micrograph showing the visual cortex (predominantly pink). Subcortical white matter (predominantly blue) is seen at the bottom of the image. HE-LFB stain.

The neocortex is formed of six layers, numbered I to VI, from the outermost layer I – near to the pia mater, to the innermost layer VI – near to the underlying white matter. Each cortical layer has a characteristic distribution of different neurons and their connections with other cortical and subcortical regions. There are direct connections between different cortical areas and indirect connections via the thalamus.

One of the clearest examples of cortical layering is the line of Gennari in the primary visual cortex. This is a band of whiter tissue that can be observed with the naked eye in the calcarine sulcus of the occipital lobe. The line of Gennari is composed of axons bringing visual information from the thalamus into layer IV of the visual cortex.

Staining cross-sections of the cortex to reveal the position of neuronal cell bodies and the intracortical axon tracts allowed neuroanatomists in the early 20th century to produce a detailed description of the laminar structure of the cortex in different species. The work of Korbinian Brodmann (1909) established that the mammalian neocortex is consistently divided into six layers.

Layer I edit

Layer I is the molecular layer, and contains few scattered neurons, including GABAergic rosehip neurons.[22] Layer I consists largely of extensions of apical dendritic tufts of pyramidal neurons and horizontally oriented axons, as well as glial cells.[4] During development, Cajal–Retzius cells[23] and subpial granular layer cells[24] are present in this layer. Also, some spiny stellate cells can be found here. Inputs to the apical tufts are thought to be crucial for the feedback interactions in the cerebral cortex involved in associative learning and attention.[25] While it was once thought that the input to layer I came from the cortex itself,[26] it is now realized that layer I across the cerebral cortex mantle receives substantial input from matrix or M-type thalamus cells[27] (in contrast to core or C-type that go to layer IV).[28]

Layer II edit

Layer II, the external granular layer, contains small pyramidal neurons and numerous stellate neurons.

Layer III edit

Layer III, the external pyramidal layer, contains predominantly small and medium-size pyramidal neurons, as well as non-pyramidal neurons with vertically oriented intracortical axons; layers I through III are the main target of interhemispheric corticocortical afferents, and layer III is the principal source of corticocortical efferents.

Layer IV edit

Layer IV, the internal granular layer, contains different types of stellate and pyramidal cells, and is the main target of thalamocortical afferents from thalamus type C neurons (core-type)[28] as well as intra-hemispheric corticocortical afferents. The layers above layer IV are also referred to as supragranular layers (layers I-III), whereas the layers below are referred to as infragranular layers (layers V and VI).

Layer V edit

Layer V, the internal pyramidal layer, contains large pyramidal neurons. Axons from these leave the cortex and connect with subcortical structures including the basal ganglia. In the primary motor cortex of the frontal lobe, layer V contains giant pyramidal cells called Betz cells, whose axons travel through the internal capsule, the brain stem, and the spinal cord forming the corticospinal tract, which is the main pathway for voluntary motor control.

Layer VI edit

Layer VI, the polymorphic or multiform layer, contains few large pyramidal neurons and many small spindle-like pyramidal and multiform neurons; layer VI sends efferent fibers to the thalamus, establishing a very precise reciprocal interconnection between the cortex and the thalamus.[29] That is, layer VI neurons from one cortical column connect with thalamus neurons that provide input to the same cortical column. These connections are both excitatory and inhibitory. Neurons send excitatory fibers to neurons in the thalamus and also send collaterals to the thalamic reticular nucleus that inhibit these same thalamus neurons or ones adjacent to them.[30] One theory is that because the inhibitory output is reduced by cholinergic input to the cerebral cortex, this provides the brainstem with adjustable "gain control for the relay of lemniscal inputs".[30]

Columns edit

The cortical layers are not simply stacked one over the other; there exist characteristic connections between different layers and neuronal types, which span all the thickness of the cortex. These cortical microcircuits are grouped into cortical columns and minicolumns.[31] It has been proposed that the minicolumns are the basic functional units of the cortex.[32] In 1957, Vernon Mountcastle showed that the functional properties of the cortex change abruptly between laterally adjacent points; however, they are continuous in the direction perpendicular to the surface. Later works have provided evidence of the presence of functionally distinct cortical columns in the visual cortex (Hubel and Wiesel, 1959),[33] auditory cortex, and associative cortex.

Cortical areas that lack a layer IV are called agranular. Cortical areas that have only a rudimentary layer IV are called dysgranular.[34] Information processing within each layer is determined by different temporal dynamics with that in layers II/III having a slow 2 Hz oscillation while that in layer V has a fast 10–15 Hz oscillation.[35]

Types of cortex edit

Based on the differences in laminar organization the cerebral cortex can be classified into two types, the large area of neocortex which has six cell layers, and the much smaller area of allocortex that has three or four layers:[2]

  • The neocortex is also known as the isocortex or neopallium and is the part of the mature cerebral cortex with six distinct layers. Examples of neocortical areas include the granular primary motor cortex, and the striate primary visual cortex. The neocortex has two subtypes, the true isocortex and the proisocortex which is a transitional region between the isocortex and the regions of the periallocortex.
  • The allocortex is the part of the cerebral cortex with three or four layers, and has three subtypes, the paleocortex with three cortical laminae, the archicortex which has four or five, and a transitional area adjacent to the allocortex, the periallocortex. Examples of allocortex are the olfactory cortex and the hippocampus.

There is a transitional area between the neocortex and the allocortex called the paralimbic cortex, where layers 2, 3 and 4 are merged. This area incorporates the proisocortex of the neocortex and the periallocortex of the allocortex. In addition, the cerebral cortex may be classified into four lobes: the frontal lobe, temporal lobe, the parietal lobe, and the occipital lobe, named from their overlying bones of the skull.

Blood supply and drainage edit

 
Arterial supply showing the regions supplied by the posterior, middle, and anterior cerebral arteries.

Blood supply to the cerebral cortex is part of the cerebral circulation. Cerebral arteries supply the blood that perfuses the cerebrum. This arterial blood carries oxygen, glucose, and other nutrients to the cortex. Cerebral veins drain the deoxygenated blood, and metabolic wastes including carbon dioxide, back to the heart.

The main arteries supplying the cortex are the anterior cerebral artery, the middle cerebral artery, and the posterior cerebral artery. The anterior cerebral artery supplies the anterior portions of the brain, including most of the frontal lobe. The middle cerebral artery supplies the parietal lobes, temporal lobes, and parts of the occipital lobes. The middle cerebral artery splits into two branches to supply the left and right hemisphere, where they branch further. The posterior cerebral artery supplies the occipital lobes.

The circle of Willis is the main blood system that deals with blood supply in the cerebrum and cerebral cortex.

 
Cortical blood supply

Development edit

The prenatal development of the cerebral cortex is a complex and finely tuned process called corticogenesis, influenced by the interplay between genes and the environment.[36]

Neural tube edit

The cerebral cortex develops from the most anterior part, the forebrain region, of the neural tube.[37][38] The neural plate folds and closes to form the neural tube. From the cavity inside the neural tube develops the ventricular system, and, from the neuroepithelial cells of its walls, the neurons and glia of the nervous system. The most anterior (front, or cranial) part of the neural plate, the prosencephalon, which is evident before neurulation begins, gives rise to the cerebral hemispheres and later cortex.[39]

Cortical neuron development edit

Cortical neurons are generated within the ventricular zone, next to the ventricles. At first, this zone contains neural stem cells, that transition to radial glial cells–progenitor cells, which divide to produce glial cells and neurons.[40]

Radial glia edit

 
Neurogenesis is shown in red and lamination is shown in blue. Adapted from (Sur et al. 2001)

The cerebral cortex is composed of a heterogenous population of cells that give rise to different cell types. The majority of these cells are derived from radial glia migration that form the different cell types of the neocortex and it is a period associated with an increase in neurogenesis. Similarly, the process of neurogenesis regulates lamination to form the different layers of the cortex. During this process there is an increase in the restriction of cell fate that begins with earlier progenitors giving rise to any cell type in the cortex and later progenitors giving rise only to neurons of superficial layers. This differential cell fate creates an inside-out topography in the cortex with younger neurons in superficial layers and older neurons in deeper layers. In addition, laminar neurons are stopped in S or G2 phase in order to give a fine distinction between the different cortical layers. Laminar differentiation is not fully complete until after birth since during development laminar neurons are still sensitive to extrinsic signals and environmental cues.[41]

Although the majority of the cells that compose the cortex are derived locally from radial glia there is a subset population of neurons that migrate from other regions. Radial glia give rise to neurons that are pyramidal in shape and use glutamate as a neurotransmitter, however these migrating cells contribute neurons that are stellate-shaped and use GABA as their main neurotransmitter. These GABAergic neurons are generated by progenitor cells in the medial ganglionic eminence (MGE) that migrate tangentially to the cortex via the subventricular zone. This migration of GABAergic neurons is particularly important since GABA receptors are excitatory during development. This excitation is primarily driven by the flux of chloride ions through the GABA receptor, however in adults chloride concentrations shift causing an inward flux of chloride that hyperpolarizes postsynaptic neurons.[42] The glial fibers produced in the first divisions of the progenitor cells are radially oriented, spanning the thickness of the cortex from the ventricular zone to the outer, pial surface, and provide scaffolding for the migration of neurons outwards from the ventricular zone.[43][44]

At birth there are very few dendrites present on the cortical neuron's cell body, and the axon is undeveloped. During the first year of life the dendrites become dramatically increased in number, such that they can accommodate up to a hundred thousand synaptic connections with other neurons. The axon can develop to extend a long way from the cell body.[45]

Asymmetric division edit

The first divisions of the progenitor cells are symmetric, which duplicates the total number of progenitor cells at each mitotic cycle. Then, some progenitor cells begin to divide asymmetrically, producing one postmitotic cell that migrates along the radial glial fibers, leaving the ventricular zone, and one progenitor cell, which continues to divide until the end of development, when it differentiates into a glial cell or an ependymal cell. As the G1 phase of mitosis is elongated, in what is seen as selective cell-cycle lengthening, the newly born neurons migrate to more superficial layers of the cortex.[46] The migrating daughter cells become the pyramidal cells of the cerebral cortex.[47] The development process is time ordered and regulated by hundreds of genes and epigenetic regulatory mechanisms.[48]

Layer organization edit

 
Human cortical development between 26 and 39 week gestational age

The layered structure of the mature cerebral cortex is formed during development. The first pyramidal neurons generated migrate out of the ventricular zone and subventricular zone, together with reelin-producing Cajal–Retzius neurons, from the preplate. Next, a cohort of neurons migrating into the middle of the preplate divides this transient layer into the superficial marginal zone, which will become layer I of the mature neocortex, and the subplate,[49] forming a middle layer called the cortical plate. These cells will form the deep layers of the mature cortex, layers five and six. Later born neurons migrate radially into the cortical plate past the deep layer neurons, and become the upper layers (two to four). Thus, the layers of the cortex are created in an inside-out order.[50] The only exception to this inside-out sequence of neurogenesis occurs in the layer I of primates, in which, in contrast to rodents, neurogenesis continues throughout the entire period of corticogenesis.[51]

Cortical patterning edit

 
Depicted in blue, Emx2 is highly expressed at the caudomedial pole and dissipates outward. Pax6 expression is represented in purple and is highly expressed at the rostral lateral pole. (Adapted from Sanes, D., Reh, T., & Harris, W. (2012). Development of the Nervous System (3rd ed.). Burlington: Elsevier Science)

The map of functional cortical areas, which include primary motor and visual cortex, originates from a 'protomap',[52] which is regulated by molecular signals such as fibroblast growth factor FGF8 early in embryonic development.[53][54] These signals regulate the size, shape, and position of cortical areas on the surface of the cortical primordium, in part by regulating gradients of transcription factor expression, through a process called cortical patterning. Examples of such transcription factors include the genes EMX2 and PAX6.[55] Together, both transcription factors form an opposing gradient of expression. Pax6 is highly expressed at the rostral lateral pole, while Emx2 is highly expressed in the caudomedial pole. The establishment of this gradient is important for proper development. For example, mutations in Pax6 can cause expression levels of Emx2 to expand out of its normal expression domain, which would ultimately lead to an expansion of the areas normally derived from the caudal medial cortex, such as the visual cortex. On the contrary, if mutations in Emx2 occur, it can cause the Pax6-expressing domain to expand and result in the frontal and motor cortical regions enlarging. Therefore, researchers believe that similar gradients and signaling centers next to the cortex could contribute to the regional expression of these transcription factors.[42] Two very well studied patterning signals for the cortex include FGF and retinoic acid. If FGFs are misexpressed in different areas of the developing cortex, cortical patterning is disrupted. Specifically, when Fgf8 is increased in the anterior pole, Emx2 is downregulated and a caudal shift in the cortical region occurs. This ultimately causes an expansion of the rostral regions. Therefore, Fgf8 and other FGFs play a role in the regulation of expression of Emx2 and Pax6 and represent how the cerebral cortex can become specialized for different functions.[42]

Rapid expansion of the cortical surface area is regulated by the amount of self-renewal of radial glial cells and is partly regulated by FGF and Notch genes.[56] During the period of cortical neurogenesis and layer formation, many higher mammals begin the process of gyrification, which generates the characteristic folds of the cerebral cortex.[57][58] Gyrification is regulated by a DNA-associated protein Trnp1[59] and by FGF and SHH signaling[60][61]

Evolution edit

Of all the different brain regions, the cerebral cortex shows the largest evolutionary variation and has evolved most recently.[6] In contrast to the highly conserved circuitry of the medulla oblongata, for example, which serves critical functions such as regulation of heart and respiration rates, many areas of the cerebral cortex are not strictly necessary for survival. Thus, the evolution of the cerebral cortex has seen the advent and modification of new functional areas—particularly association areas that do not directly receive input from outside the cortex.[6]

A key theory of cortical evolution is embodied in the radial unit hypothesis and related protomap hypothesis, first proposed by Rakic.[62] This theory states that new cortical areas are formed by the addition of new radial units, which is accomplished at the stem cell level. The protomap hypothesis states that the cellular and molecular identity and characteristics of neurons in each cortical area are specified by cortical stem cells, known as radial glial cells, in a primordial map. This map is controlled by secreted signaling proteins and downstream transcription factors.[63][64][65]

Function edit

 
Some functional areas of cortex

Connections edit

The cerebral cortex is connected to various subcortical structures such as the thalamus and the basal ganglia, sending information to them along efferent connections and receiving information from them via afferent connections. Most sensory information is routed to the cerebral cortex via the thalamus. Olfactory information, however, passes through the olfactory bulb to the olfactory cortex (piriform cortex). The majority of connections are from one area of the cortex to another, rather than from subcortical areas; Braitenberg and Schüz (1998) claim that in primary sensory areas, at the cortical level where the input fibers terminate, up to 20% of the synapses are supplied by extracortical afferents but that in other areas and other layers the percentage is likely to be much lower.[66]

Cortical areas edit

The whole of the cerebral cortex was divided into 52 different areas in an early presentation by Korbinian Brodmann. These areas known as Brodmann areas, are based on their cytoarchitecture but also relate to various functions. An example is Brodmann area 17 which is the primary visual cortex.

In more general terms the cortex is typically described as comprising three parts: sensory, motor, and association areas.

Sensory areas edit

 
Motor and sensory regions of the cerebral cortex
 
Motor and sensory regions of the cerebral cortex

The sensory areas are the cortical areas that receive and process information from the senses. Parts of the cortex that receive sensory inputs from the thalamus are called primary sensory areas. The senses of vision, hearing, and touch are served by the primary visual cortex, primary auditory cortex and primary somatosensory cortex respectively. In general, the two hemispheres receive information from the opposite (contralateral) side of the body. For example, the right primary somatosensory cortex receives information from the left limbs, and the right visual cortex receives information from the left visual field. The organization of sensory maps in the cortex reflects that of the corresponding sensing organ, in what is known as a topographic map. Neighboring points in the primary visual cortex, for example, correspond to neighboring points in the retina. This topographic map is called a retinotopic map. In the same way, there exists a tonotopic map in the primary auditory cortex and a somatotopic map in the primary sensory cortex. This last topographic map of the body onto the posterior central gyrus has been illustrated as a deformed human representation, the somatosensory homunculus, where the size of different body parts reflects the relative density of their innervation. Areas with much sensory innervation, such as the fingertips and the lips, require more cortical area to process finer sensation.

Motor areas edit

The motor areas are located in both hemispheres of the cortex. The motor areas are very closely related to the control of voluntary movements, especially fine fragmented movements performed by the hand. The right half of the motor area controls the left side of the body, and vice versa.

Two areas of the cortex are commonly referred to as motor:

In addition, motor functions have been described for:

Just underneath the cerebral cortex are interconnected subcortical masses of grey matter called basal ganglia (or nuclei). The basal ganglia receive input from the substantia nigra of the midbrain and motor areas of the cerebral cortex, and send signals back to both of these locations. They are involved in motor control. They are found lateral to the thalamus. The main components of the basal ganglia are the caudate nucleus, the putamen, the globus pallidus, the substantia nigra, the nucleus accumbens, and the subthalamic nucleus. The putamen and globus pallidus are also collectively known as the lentiform nucleus, because together they form a lens-shaped body. The putamen and caudate nucleus are also collectively called the corpus striatum after their striped appearance.[67][68]

Association areas edit

 
Cortical areas involved in speech processing.

The association areas are the parts of the cerebral cortex that do not belong to the primary regions. They function to produce a meaningful perceptual experience of the world, enable us to interact effectively, and support abstract thinking and language. The parietal, temporal, and occipital lobes – all located in the posterior part of the cortex – integrate sensory information and information stored in memory. The frontal lobe or prefrontal association complex is involved in planning actions and movement, as well as abstract thought. Globally, the association areas are organized as distributed networks.[69] Each network connects areas distributed across widely spaced regions of the cortex. Distinct networks are positioned adjacent to one another yielding a complex series of interwoven networks. The specific organization of the association networks is debated with evidence for interactions, hierarchical relationships, and competition between networks.

In humans, association networks are particularly important to language function. In the past it was theorized that language abilities are localized in Broca's area in areas of the left inferior frontal gyrus, BA44 and BA45, for language expression and in Wernicke's area BA22, for language reception. However, the processes of language expression and reception have been shown to occur in areas other than just those structures around the lateral sulcus, including the frontal lobe, basal ganglia, cerebellum, and pons.[70]

Clinical significance edit

 
Hemodynamic changes observed on gyrencephalic brain cortex after an arterial vessel occlusion in IOS. The video has a speed of 50x to better appreciate the spreading depolarization over the brain cortex. Pictures are dynamically subtracted to a reference picture 40 s before. First we see the initial are of change at the exact moment where the middle cerebral artery group (left) is occluded. The area is highlighted with a white line. Later we appreciate the signal produced by Spreading Depolarizations. We see markedly the front of waves.[71] https://doi.org/10.1007/s00701-019-04132-8

Neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's disease, show as a marker, an atrophy of the grey matter of the cerebral cortex.[72]

Other diseases of the central nervous system include neurological disorders such as epilepsy, movement disorders, and different types of aphasia (difficulties in speech expression or comprehension).

Brain damage from disease or trauma, can involve damage to a specific lobe such as in frontal lobe disorder, and associated functions will be affected. The blood–brain barrier that serves to protect the brain from infection can become compromised allowing entry to pathogens.

The developing fetus is susceptible to a range of environmental factors that can cause birth defects and problems in later development. Maternal alcohol consumption for example can cause fetal alcohol spectrum disorder.[73] Other factors that can cause neurodevelopment disorders are toxicants such as drugs, and exposure to radiation as from X-rays. Infections can also affect the development of the cortex. A viral infection is one of the causes of lissencephaly, which results in a smooth cortex without gyrification.

A type of electrocorticography called cortical stimulation mapping is an invasive procedure that involves placing electrodes directly onto the exposed brain in order to localise the functions of specific areas of the cortex. It is used in clinical and therapeutic applications including pre-surgical mapping.[74]

Genes associated with cortical disorders edit

There are a number of genetic mutations that can cause a wide range of genetic disorders of the cerebral cortex, including microcephaly, schizencephaly and types of lissencephaly.[75] Chromosome abnormalities can also result causing a number of neurodevelopmental disorders such as fragile X syndrome and Rett syndrome.

MCPH1 codes for microcephalin, and disorders in this and in ASPM are associated with microcephaly.[75] Mutations in the gene NBS1 that codes for nibrin can cause Nijmegen breakage syndrome, characterised by microcephaly.[75]

Mutations in EMX2,[76] and COL4A1 are associated with schizencephaly,[77] a condition marked by the absence of large parts of the cerebral hemispheres.

History edit

In 1909, Korbinian Brodmann distinguished different areas of the neocortex based on cytoarchitectural difference and divided the cerebral cortex into 52 regions.[78]

Rafael Lorente de Nó, a student of Santiago Ramon y Cajal identified more than 40 different types of cortical neurons based on the distribution of their dendrites and axons.[78]

Other animals edit

The cerebral cortex is derived from the pallium, a layered structure found in the forebrain of all vertebrates. The basic form of the pallium is a cylindrical layer enclosing fluid-filled ventricles. Around the circumference of the cylinder are four zones, the dorsal pallium, medial pallium, ventral pallium, and lateral pallium, which are thought to be homologous to the neocortex, hippocampus, amygdala, and olfactory cortex, respectively.

Until recently no counterpart to the cerebral cortex had been recognized in invertebrates. However, a study published in the journal Cell in 2010, based on gene expression profiles, reported strong affinities between the cerebral cortex and the mushroom bodies of the ragworm Platynereis dumerilii.[79] Mushroom bodies are structures in the brains of many types of worms and arthropods that are known to play important roles in learning and memory; the genetic evidence indicates a common evolutionary origin, and therefore indicates that the origins of the earliest precursors of the cerebral cortex date back to the Precambrian era.

Additional images edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "cerebral mantle". TheFreeDictionary.com.
  2. ^ a b Strominger, Norman L.; Demarest, Robert J.; Laemle, Lois B. (2012). "Cerebral Cortex". Noback's Human Nervous System, Seventh Edition. Humana Press. pp. 429–451. doi:10.1007/978-1-61779-779-8_25. ISBN 978-1-61779-778-1.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Saladin, Kenneth (2011). Human anatomy (3rd ed.). McGraw-Hill. pp. 416–422. ISBN 9780071222075.
  4. ^ a b Shipp, Stewart (2007-06-17). "Structure and function of the cerebral cortex". Current Biology. 17 (12): R443–9. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2007.03.044. PMC 1870400. PMID 17580069.
  5. ^ Fernández, V; Llinares-Benadero, C; Borrell, V (17 May 2016). "Cerebral cortex expansion and folding: what have we learned?". The EMBO Journal. 35 (10): 1021–44. doi:10.15252/embj.201593701. PMC 4868950. PMID 27056680.
  6. ^ a b c d Rakic, P (October 2009). "Evolution of the neocortex: a perspective from developmental biology". Nature Reviews Neuroscience. 10 (10): 724–35. doi:10.1038/nrn2719. PMC 2913577. PMID 19763105.
  7. ^ Principles of neural science (4th ed.). McGraw-Hill, Health Professions Division. 2000-01-05. ISBN 978-0838577011.
  8. ^ a b c Roberts, P (1992). Neuroanatomy (3rd ed.). Springer-Verlag. pp. 86–92. ISBN 9780387977775.
  9. ^ Lodato, Simona; Arlotta, Paola (2015-11-13). "Generating Neuronal Diversity in the Mammalian Cerebral Cortex". Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology. 31 (1): 699–720. doi:10.1146/annurev-cellbio-100814-125353. PMC 4778709. PMID 26359774. Functional columns were first defined in the cortex by Mountcastle (1957), who proposed the columnar hypothesis, which states that the cortex is composed of discrete, modular columns of neurons, characterized by a consistent connectivity profile.
  10. ^ Ansen-Wilson, LJ; Lipinski, RJ (January 2017). "Gene-environment interactions in cortical interneuron development and dysfunction: A review of preclinical studies". Neurotoxicology. 58: 120–129. doi:10.1016/j.neuro.2016.12.002. PMC 5328258. PMID 27932026.
  11. ^ Carpenter (1985). Core text of neuroanatomy (3rd ed.). Williams & Wilkins. pp. 348–358. ISBN 978-0683014556.
  12. ^ Toro, Roberto; Perron, Michel; Pike, Bruce; Richer, Louis; Veillette, Suzanne; Pausova, Zdenka; Paus, Tomáš (2008-10-01). "Brain Size and Folding of the Human Cerebral Cortex". Cerebral Cortex. 18 (10): 2352–2357. doi:10.1093/cercor/bhm261. ISSN 1047-3211. PMID 18267953.
  13. ^ Nieuwenhuys, R (2012). The insular cortex: a review. Progress in Brain Research. Vol. 195. pp. 123–63. doi:10.1016/B978-0-444-53860-4.00007-6. PMID 22230626.
  14. ^ Tortora, G; Derrickson, B (2011). Principles of anatomy & physiology (13th. ed.). Wiley. p. 549. ISBN 9780470646083.
  15. ^ a b Nieuwenhuys R, Donkelaar HJ, Nicholson C (1998). The central nervous system of vertebrates, Volume 1. Springer. pp. 2011–2012. ISBN 978-3-540-56013-5.
  16. ^ Frithjof Kruggel; Martina K. Brückner; Thomas Arendt; Christopher J. Wiggins; D. Yves von Cramon (2003). "Analyzing the neocortical fine-structure". Medical Image Analysis. 7 (3): 251–264. doi:10.1016/S1361-8415(03)00006-9. hdl:11858/00-001M-0000-0010-9C60-3. PMID 12946467.
  17. ^ Katherine L. Narr; Roger P. Woods; Paul M. Thompson; Philip Szeszko; Dilbert Robinson; Teodora Dimtcheva; Mala Gurbani; Arthur W. Toga; Robert M. Bilder (2007). "Relationships between IQ and Regional Cortical Grey Matter Thickness in Healthy Adults". Cerebral Cortex. 17 (9): 2163–2171. doi:10.1093/cercor/bhl125. PMID 17118969.
  18. ^ Alexandre F.M. DaSilva; Cristina Granziera; Josh Snyder; Nouchine Hadjikhani (2007). "Thickening in the somatosensory cortex of patients with migraine". Neurology. 69 (21): 1990–1995. doi:10.1212/01.wnl.0000291618.32247.2d. PMC 3757544. PMID 18025393.
  19. ^ Catharine Paddock (2007-11-20). "Migraine Sufferers Have Thicker Brain Cortex". Medical News Today. from the original on 2008-05-11.
  20. ^ Datte R, Detre JA, et al. (Oct 2011). "Absence of changes in cortical thickness in patients with migraine". Cephalalgia. 31 (14): 1452–8. doi:10.1177/0333102411421025. PMC 3512201. PMID 21911412.
  21. ^ Habib M (2000). "The neurological basis of developmental dyslexia: an overview and working hypothesis". Brain. 123 (12): 2373–99. doi:10.1093/brain/123.12.2373. PMID 11099442.
  22. ^ "Scientists identify a new kind of human brain cell". Allen Institute. 27 August 2018.
  23. ^ Meyer, Gundela; Goffinet, André M.; Fairén, Alfonso (1999). "Feature Article: What is a Cajal–Retzius cell? A Reassessment of a Classical Cell Type Based on Recent Observations in the Developing Neocortex". Cerebral Cortex. 9 (8): 765–775. doi:10.1093/cercor/9.8.765. PMID 10600995.
  24. ^ Judaš, Miloš; Pletikos, Mihovil (2010). "The discovery of the subpial granular layer in the human cerebral cortex". Translational Neuroscience. 1 (3): 255–260. doi:10.2478/v10134-010-0037-4. S2CID 143409890.
  25. ^ Gilbert CD, Sigman M (2007). "Brain states: top-down influences in sensory processing". Neuron. 54 (5): 677–96. doi:10.1016/j.neuron.2007.05.019. hdl:11336/67502. PMID 17553419.
  26. ^ Cauller L (1995). "Layer I of primary sensory neocortex: where top-down converges upon bottom-up". Behav Brain Res. 71 (1–2): 163–70. doi:10.1016/0166-4328(95)00032-1. PMID 8747184. S2CID 4015532.
  27. ^ Rubio-Garrido P, Pérez-de-Manzo F, Porrero C, Galazo MJ, Clascá F (2009). "Thalamic input to distal apical dendrites in neocortical layer 1 is massive and highly convergent". Cereb Cortex. 19 (10): 2380–95. doi:10.1093/cercor/bhn259. PMID 19188274.
  28. ^ a b Jones EG (1998). "Viewpoint: the core and matrix of thalamic organization". Neuroscience. 85 (2): 331–45. doi:10.1016/S0306-4522(97)00581-2. PMID 9622234. S2CID 17846130.
  29. ^ Creutzfeldt, O. 1995. Cortex Cerebri. Springer-Verlag.
  30. ^ a b Lam YW, Sherman SM (2010). "Functional Organization of the Somatosensory Cortical Layer 6 Feedback to the Thalamus". Cereb Cortex. 20 (1): 13–24. doi:10.1093/cercor/bhp077. PMC 2792186. PMID 19447861.
  31. ^ Suzuki, IK; Hirata, T (January 2013). "Neocortical neurogenesis is not really "neo": a new evolutionary model derived from a comparative study of chick pallial development" (PDF). Development, Growth & Differentiation. 55 (1): 173–87. doi:10.1111/dgd.12020. PMID 23230908. S2CID 36706690.
  32. ^ Mountcastle V (1997). "The columnar organization of the neocortex". Brain. 120 (4): 701–722. doi:10.1093/brain/120.4.701. PMID 9153131.
  33. ^ Hubel DH, Wiesel TN (October 1959). "Receptive fields of single neurones in the cat's striate cortex". The Journal of Physiology. 148 (3): 574–91. doi:10.1113/jphysiol.1959.sp006308. PMC 1363130. PMID 14403679.
  34. ^ S.M. Dombrowski, C.C. Hilgetag, and H. Barbas. Quantitative Architecture Distinguishes Prefrontal Cortical Systems in the Rhesus Monkey 2008-08-29 at the Wayback Machine.Cereb. Cortex 11: 975–988. "...they either lack (agranular) or have only a rudimentary granular layer IV (dysgranular)."
  35. ^ Sun W, Dan Y (2009). "Layer-specific network oscillation and spatiotemporal receptive field in the visual cortex". Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 106 (42): 17986–17991. Bibcode:2009PNAS..10617986S. doi:10.1073/pnas.0903962106. PMC 2764922. PMID 19805197.
  36. ^ Pletikos, Mihovil; Sousa, Andre MM; et al. (22 January 2014). "Temporal Specification and Bilaterality of Human Neocortical Topographic Gene Expression". Neuron. 81 (2): 321–332. doi:10.1016/j.neuron.2013.11.018. PMC 3931000. PMID 24373884.
  37. ^ Wolpert, Lewis (2015). Principles of development (Fifth ed.). UK: Oxford University Press. p. 533. ISBN 9780199678143.
  38. ^ Warren N, Caric D, Pratt T, Clausen JA, Asavaritikrai P, Mason JO, Hill RE, Price DJ (1999). "The transcription factor, Pax6, is required for cell proliferation and differentiation in the developing cerebral cortex". Cerebral Cortex. 9 (6): 627–35. doi:10.1093/cercor/9.6.627. PMID 10498281.
  39. ^ Larsen, W J. Human Embryology 3rd edition 2001. pp 421-422 ISBN 0-443-06583-7
  40. ^ Stephen C. Noctor; Alexander C. Flint; Tamily A. Weissman; Ryan S. Dammerman & Arnold R. Kriegstein (2001). "Neurons derived from radial glial cells establish radial units in neocortex". Nature. 409 (6821): 714–720. Bibcode:2001Natur.409..714N. doi:10.1038/35055553. PMID 11217860. S2CID 3041502.
  41. ^ Sur, Mriganka; Leamey, Catherine A. (2001). "Development and Plasticity of Cortical Areas and Networks". Nature Reviews Neuroscience. 2 (4): 251–262. doi:10.1038/35067562. PMID 11283748. S2CID 893478.
  42. ^ a b c Sanes, Dan H.; Reh, Thomas A.; Harris, William A. (2012). Development of the Nervous System. Elsevier Inc. ISBN 978-0-12-374539-2.
  43. ^ Rakic, P (October 2009). "Evolution of the neocortex: a perspective from developmental biology". Nature Reviews Neuroscience. 10 (10): 724–35. doi:10.1038/nrn2719. PMC 2913577. PMID 19763105.
  44. ^ Rakic, P (November 1972). "Extrinsic cytological determinants of basket and stellate cell dendritic pattern in the cerebellar molecular layer". The Journal of Comparative Neurology. 146 (3): 335–54. doi:10.1002/cne.901460304. PMID 4628749. S2CID 31900267.
  45. ^ Gilbert, Scott (2006). Developmental biology (8th ed.). Sinauer Associates Publishers. pp. 394–395. ISBN 9780878932504.
  46. ^ Calegari, F; Haubensack W; Haffner C; Huttner WB (2005). "Selective lengthening of the cell cycle in the neurogenic subpopulation of neural progenitor cells during mouse brain development". The Journal of Neuroscience. 25 (28): 6533–8. doi:10.1523/jneurosci.0778-05.2005. PMC 6725437. PMID 16014714.
  47. ^ P. Rakic (1988). "Specification of cerebral cortical areas". Science. 241 (4862): 170–176. Bibcode:1988Sci...241..170R. doi:10.1126/science.3291116. PMID 3291116.
  48. ^ Hu, X.L.; Wang, Y.; Shen, Q. (2012). "Epigenetic control on cell fate choice in neural stem cells". Protein & Cell. 3 (4): 278–290. doi:10.1007/s13238-012-2916-6. PMC 4729703. PMID 22549586.
  49. ^ Kostović, Ivica (1990). "Developmental history of the transient subplate zone in the visual and somatosensory cortex of the macaque monkey and human brain". Journal of Comparative Neurology. 297 (3): 441–470. doi:10.1002/cne.902970309. PMID 2398142. S2CID 21371568.
  50. ^ Rakic, P (1 February 1974). "Neurons in rhesus monkey visual cortex: systematic relation between time of origin and eventual disposition". Science. 183 (4123): 425–7. Bibcode:1974Sci...183..425R. doi:10.1126/science.183.4123.425. PMID 4203022. S2CID 10881759.
  51. ^ Zecevic N, Rakic P (2001). "Development of layer I neurons in the primate cerebral cortex". The Journal of Neuroscience. 21 (15): 5607–19. doi:10.1523/JNEUROSCI.21-15-05607.2001. PMC 6762645. PMID 11466432.
  52. ^ Rakic, P (8 July 1988). "Specification of cerebral cortical areas". Science. 241 (4862): 170–6. Bibcode:1988Sci...241..170R. doi:10.1126/science.3291116. PMID 3291116.
  53. ^ Fukuchi-Shimogori, T; Grove, EA (2 November 2001). "Neocortex patterning by the secreted signaling molecule FGF8". Science. 294 (5544): 1071–4. Bibcode:2001Sci...294.1071F. doi:10.1126/science.1064252. PMID 11567107. S2CID 14807054.
  54. ^ Garel, S; Huffman, KJ; Rubenstein, JL (May 2003). "Molecular regionalization of the neocortex is disrupted in Fgf8 hypomorphic mutants". Development. 130 (9): 1903–14. doi:10.1242/dev.00416. PMID 12642494. S2CID 6533589.
  55. ^ Bishop, KM; Goudreau, G; O'Leary, DD (14 April 2000). "Regulation of area identity in the mammalian neocortex by Emx2 and Pax6". Science. 288 (5464): 344–9. Bibcode:2000Sci...288..344B. doi:10.1126/science.288.5464.344. PMID 10764649.
  56. ^ Rash, BG; Lim, HD; Breunig, JJ; Vaccarino, FM (26 October 2011). "FGF signaling expands embryonic cortical surface area by regulating Notch-dependent neurogenesis". The Journal of Neuroscience. 31 (43): 15604–17. doi:10.1523/jneurosci.4439-11.2011. PMC 3235689. PMID 22031906.
  57. ^ Rajagopalan, V; Scott, J; Habas, PA; Kim, K; Corbett-Detig, J; Rousseau, F; Barkovich, AJ; Glenn, OA; Studholme, C (23 February 2011). "Local tissue growth patterns underlying normal fetal human brain gyrification quantified in utero". The Journal of Neuroscience. 31 (8): 2878–87. doi:10.1523/jneurosci.5458-10.2011. PMC 3093305. PMID 21414909.
  58. ^ Lui, Jan H.; Hansen, David V.; Kriegstein, Arnold R. (2011-07-08). "Development and evolution of the human neocortex". Cell. 146 (1): 18–36. doi:10.1016/j.cell.2011.06.030. ISSN 1097-4172. PMC 3610574. PMID 21729779.
  59. ^ Stahl, Ronny; Walcher, Tessa; De Juan Romero, Camino; Pilz, Gregor Alexander; Cappello, Silvia; Irmler, Martin; Sanz-Aquela, José Miguel; Beckers, Johannes; Blum, Robert (2013-04-25). "Trnp1 regulates expansion and folding of the mammalian cerebral cortex by control of radial glial fate". Cell. 153 (3): 535–549. doi:10.1016/j.cell.2013.03.027. ISSN 1097-4172. PMID 23622239.
  60. ^ Wang, Lei; Hou, Shirui; Han, Young-Goo (2016-05-23). "Hedgehog signaling promotes basal progenitor expansion and the growth and folding of the neocortex". Nature Neuroscience. 19 (7): 888–96. doi:10.1038/nn.4307. ISSN 1546-1726. PMC 4925239. PMID 27214567.
  61. ^ Rash, Brian G.; Tomasi, Simone; Lim, H. David; Suh, Carol Y.; Vaccarino, Flora M. (2013-06-26). "Cortical gyrification induced by fibroblast growth factor 2 in the mouse brain". The Journal of Neuroscience. 33 (26): 10802–10814. doi:10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3621-12.2013. ISSN 1529-2401. PMC 3693057. PMID 23804101.
  62. ^ Rakic, P (8 July 1988). "Specification of cerebral cortical areas". Science. 241 (4862): 170–6. Bibcode:1988Sci...241..170R. doi:10.1126/science.3291116. PMID 3291116.
  63. ^ Fukuchi-Shimogori, T; Grove, EA (2 November 2001). "Neocortex patterning by the secreted signaling molecule FGF8". Science. 294 (5544): 1071–4. Bibcode:2001Sci...294.1071F. doi:10.1126/science.1064252. PMID 11567107. S2CID 14807054.
  64. ^ Bishop, KM; Goudreau, G; O'Leary, DD (14 April 2000). "Regulation of area identity in the mammalian neocortex by Emx2 and Pax6". Science. 288 (5464): 344–9. Bibcode:2000Sci...288..344B. doi:10.1126/science.288.5464.344. PMID 10764649.
  65. ^ Grove, EA; Fukuchi-Shimogori, T (2003). "Generating the cerebral cortical area map". Annual Review of Neuroscience. 26: 355–80. doi:10.1146/annurev.neuro.26.041002.131137. PMID 14527269. S2CID 12282525.
  66. ^ Braitenberg, V and Schüz, A 1998. "Cortex: Statistics and Geometry of Neuronal Connectivity. Second thoroughly revised edition" New York: Springer-Verlag
  67. ^ Saladin, Kenneth. Anatomy and Physiology: The Unity of Form and Function, 5th Ed. New York: McGraw-Hill Companies Inc., 2010. Print.
  68. ^ Dorland's Medical Dictionary for Health Consumers, 2008.
  69. ^ Yeo BT, Krienen FM, Sepulcre J, Sabuncu MR, Lashkari D, Hollinshead M, Roffman JL, Smoller JW, Zöllei L, Polimeni JR, Fischl B, Liu H, Buckner RL (2011). "The organization of the human cerebral cortex estimated by intrinsic functional connectivity". Journal of Neurophysiology. 106 (3): 1125–1165. doi:10.1152/jn.00338.2011. PMC 3174820. PMID 21653723.
  70. ^ Cathy J. Price (2000). "The anatomy of language: contributions from functional neuroimaging". Journal of Anatomy. 197 (3): 335–359. doi:10.1046/j.1469-7580.2000.19730335.x. PMC 1468137. PMID 11117622.
  71. ^ Kentar, Modar; Mann, Martina; Sahm, Felix; Olivares-Rivera, Arturo; Sanchez-Porras, Renan; Zerelles, Roland; Sakowitz, Oliver W.; Unterberg, Andreas W.; Santos, Edgar (2020-01-15). "Detection of spreading depolarizations in a middle cerebral artery occlusion model in swine". Acta Neurochirurgica. 162 (3): 581–592. doi:10.1007/s00701-019-04132-8. ISSN 0942-0940. PMID 31940093. S2CID 210196036.
  72. ^ Nakazawa T, Ohara T, Hirabayashi N, Furuta Y, Hata J, Shibata M, Honda T, Kitazono T, Nakao T, Ninomiya T (March 2022). "Multiple-region grey matter atrophy as a predictor for the development of dementia in a community: the Hisayama Study". J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 93 (3): 263–271. doi:10.1136/jnnp-2021-326611. PMC 8862082. PMID 34670843.
  73. ^ Mukherjee, Raja A.S.; Hollins, Sheila (2006). "Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder: An Overview". Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine. 99 (6): 298–302. doi:10.1177/014107680609900616. PMC 1472723. PMID 16738372.
  74. ^ Tarapore, PE; et al. (August 2012). "Preoperative multimodal motor mapping: a comparison of magnetoencephalography imaging, navigated transcranial magnetic stimulation, and direct cortical stimulation". Journal of Neurosurgery. 117 (2): 354–62. doi:10.3171/2012.5.JNS112124. PMC 4060619. PMID 22702484.
  75. ^ a b c Walsh, Christopher A.; Mochida, Ganeshwaran H. (1 May 2004). "Genetic Basis of Developmental Malformations of the Cerebral Cortex". Archives of Neurology. 61 (5): 637–640. doi:10.1001/archneur.61.5.637. PMID 15148137.
  76. ^ "EMX2 empty spiracles homeobox 2 [Homo sapiens (human)] – Gene – NCBI". www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov.
  77. ^ Smigiel, R; Cabala, M; Jakubiak, A; Kodera, H; Sasiadek, MJ; Matsumoto, N; Sasiadek, MM; Saitsu, H (April 2016). "Novel COL4A1 mutation in an infant with severe dysmorphic syndrome with schizencephaly, periventricular calcifications, and cataract resembling congenital infection". Birth Defects Research. Part A, Clinical and Molecular Teratology. 106 (4): 304–7. doi:10.1002/bdra.23488. PMID 26879631.
  78. ^ a b Principles of neural science. Kandel, Eric R. (5th ed.). New York. 2013. pp. 347–348. ISBN 9780071390118. OCLC 795553723.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: others (link)
  79. ^ Tomer, R; Denes, AS; Tessmar-Raible, K; Arendt, D; Tomer R; Denes AS; Tessmar-Raible K; Arendt D (2010). "Profiling by image registration reveals common origin of annelid mushroom bodies and vertebrate pallium". Cell. 142 (5): 800–809. doi:10.1016/j.cell.2010.07.043. PMID 20813265. S2CID 917306.

External links edit

  • hier-20 at NeuroNames
  • Stained brain slice images which include the "cerebral cortex" at the BrainMaps project
  • , Webvision: Comprehensive article about the structure and function of the primary visual cortex.
  • , Webvision: Image of the basic cell types of the monkey cerebral cortex.

cerebral, cortex, scientific, journal, cerebral, cortex, journal, cerebral, cortex, also, known, cerebral, mantle, outer, layer, neural, tissue, cerebrum, brain, humans, other, mammals, cerebral, cortex, mostly, consists, layered, neocortex, with, just, consis. For the scientific journal see Cerebral Cortex journal The cerebral cortex also known as the cerebral mantle 1 is the outer layer of neural tissue of the cerebrum of the brain in humans and other mammals The cerebral cortex mostly consists of the six layered neocortex with just 10 consisting of the allocortex 2 It is separated into two cortices by the longitudinal fissure that divides the cerebrum into the left and right cerebral hemispheres The two hemispheres are joined beneath the cortex by the corpus callosum The cerebral cortex is the largest site of neural integration in the central nervous system 3 It plays a key role in attention perception awareness thought memory language and consciousness The cerebral cortex is part of the brain responsible for cognition Cerebral cortexTissue slice from the brain of an adult macaque monkey Macaca mulatta The cerebral cortex is the outer layer depicted in dark violet Source BrainMaps orgGolgi stained neurons in the cortexDetailsPart ofCerebrumIdentifiersLatincortex cerebriMeSHD002540NeuroNames39NeuroLex IDbirnlex 1494TA98A14 1 09 003 A14 1 09 301TA25527 5528FMA61830Anatomical terms of neuroanatomy edit on Wikidata In most mammals apart from small mammals that have small brains the cerebral cortex is folded providing a greater surface area in the confined volume of the cranium Apart from minimising brain and cranial volume cortical folding is crucial for the brain circuitry and its functional organisation 4 In mammals with small brains there is no folding and the cortex is smooth 5 6 A fold or ridge in the cortex is termed a gyrus plural gyri and a groove is termed a sulcus plural sulci These surface convolutions appear during fetal development and continue to mature after birth through the process of gyrification In the human brain the majority of the cerebral cortex is not visible from the outside but buried in the sulci 7 The major sulci and gyri mark the divisions of the cerebrum into the lobes of the brain The four major lobes are the frontal parietal occipital and temporal lobes Other lobes are the limbic lobe and the insular cortex often referred to as the insular lobe There are between 14 and 16 billion neurons in the human cerebral cortex 3 These are organised into horizontal cortical layers and radially into cortical columns and minicolumns Cortical areas have specific functions such as movement in the motor cortex and sight in the visual cortex The motor cortex is primarily located in the precentral gyrus and the visual cortex is located in the occipital lobe Contents 1 Structure 1 1 Folds 1 2 Lobes 1 3 Thickness 1 4 Layers of neocortex 1 4 1 Layer I 1 4 2 Layer II 1 4 3 Layer III 1 4 4 Layer IV 1 4 5 Layer V 1 4 6 Layer VI 1 5 Columns 1 6 Types of cortex 2 Blood supply and drainage 3 Development 3 1 Neural tube 3 2 Cortical neuron development 3 2 1 Radial glia 3 3 Asymmetric division 3 4 Layer organization 3 5 Cortical patterning 4 Evolution 5 Function 5 1 Connections 5 2 Cortical areas 5 2 1 Sensory areas 5 2 2 Motor areas 5 2 3 Association areas 6 Clinical significance 6 1 Genes associated with cortical disorders 7 History 8 Other animals 9 Additional images 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksStructure edit nbsp Lateral view of cerebrum showing several corticesThe cerebral cortex is the outer covering of the surfaces of the cerebral hemispheres and is folded into peaks called gyri and grooves called sulci In the human brain it is between 2 and 3 4 mm thick 8 and makes up 40 of the brain s mass 3 90 of the cerebral cortex is the six layered neocortex whilst the other 10 made up of three four layered allocortex 3 There are between 14 and 16 billion neurons in the cortex 3 and these are organized radially in cortical columns and minicolumns in the horizontally organized layers of the cortex 9 10 The neocortex is separable into different regions of cortex known in the plural as cortices and include the motor cortex and visual cortex About two thirds of the cortical surface is buried in the sulci and the insular cortex is completely hidden The cortex is thickest over the top of a gyrus and thinnest at the bottom of a sulcus 11 Folds edit Further information Gyrification The cerebral cortex is folded in a way that allows a large surface area of neural tissue to fit within the confines of the neurocranium When unfolded in the human each hemispheric cortex has a total surface area of about 0 12 square metres 1 3 sq ft 12 The folding is inward away from the surface of the brain and is also present on the medial surface of each hemisphere within the longitudinal fissure Most mammals have a cerebral cortex that is convoluted with the peaks known as gyri and the troughs or grooves known as sulci Some small mammals including some small rodents have smooth cerebral surfaces without gyrification 6 Lobes edit See also Lobes of the brain The larger sulci and gyri mark the divisions of the cortex of the cerebrum into the lobes of the brain 8 There are four main lobes the frontal lobe parietal lobe temporal lobe and occipital lobe The insular cortex is often included as the insular lobe 13 The limbic lobe is a rim of cortex on the medial side of each hemisphere and is also often included 14 There are also three lobules of the brain described the paracentral lobule the superior parietal lobule and the inferior parietal lobule Thickness edit For species of mammals larger brains in absolute terms not just in relation to body size tend to have thicker cortices 15 The smallest mammals such as shrews have a neocortical thickness of about 0 5 mm the ones with the largest brains such as humans and fin whales have thicknesses of 2 4 mm 3 8 There is an approximately logarithmic relationship between brain weight and cortical thickness 15 Magnetic resonance imaging of the brain MRI makes it possible to get a measure for the thickness of the human cerebral cortex and relate it to other measures The thickness of different cortical areas varies but in general sensory cortex is thinner than motor cortex 16 One study has found some positive association between the cortical thickness and intelligence 17 Another study has found that the somatosensory cortex is thicker in migraine patients though it is not known if this is the result of migraine attacks the cause of them or if both are the result of a shared cause 18 19 A later study using a larger patient population reports no change in the cortical thickness in patients with migraine 20 A genetic disorder of the cerebral cortex whereby decreased folding in certain areas results in a microgyrus where there are four layers instead of six is in some instances seen to be related to dyslexia 21 Layers of neocortex edit nbsp Diagram of layers pattern Cells grouped on left axonal layers on right nbsp Three drawings of cortical lamination by Santiago Ramon y Cajal each showing a vertical cross section with the surface of the cortex at the top Left Nissl stained visual cortex of a human adult Middle Nissl stained motor cortex of a human adult Right Golgi stained cortex of a 1 1 2 month old infant The Nissl stain shows the cell bodies of neurons the Golgi stain shows the dendrites and axons of a random subset of neurons nbsp Micrograph showing the visual cortex predominantly pink Subcortical white matter predominantly blue is seen at the bottom of the image HE LFB stain The neocortex is formed of six layers numbered I to VI from the outermost layer I near to the pia mater to the innermost layer VI near to the underlying white matter Each cortical layer has a characteristic distribution of different neurons and their connections with other cortical and subcortical regions There are direct connections between different cortical areas and indirect connections via the thalamus One of the clearest examples of cortical layering is the line of Gennari in the primary visual cortex This is a band of whiter tissue that can be observed with the naked eye in the calcarine sulcus of the occipital lobe The line of Gennari is composed of axons bringing visual information from the thalamus into layer IV of the visual cortex Staining cross sections of the cortex to reveal the position of neuronal cell bodies and the intracortical axon tracts allowed neuroanatomists in the early 20th century to produce a detailed description of the laminar structure of the cortex in different species The work of Korbinian Brodmann 1909 established that the mammalian neocortex is consistently divided into six layers Layer I edit Layer I is the molecular layer and contains few scattered neurons including GABAergic rosehip neurons 22 Layer I consists largely of extensions of apical dendritic tufts of pyramidal neurons and horizontally oriented axons as well as glial cells 4 During development Cajal Retzius cells 23 and subpial granular layer cells 24 are present in this layer Also some spiny stellate cells can be found here Inputs to the apical tufts are thought to be crucial for the feedback interactions in the cerebral cortex involved in associative learning and attention 25 While it was once thought that the input to layer I came from the cortex itself 26 it is now realized that layer I across the cerebral cortex mantle receives substantial input from matrix or M type thalamus cells 27 in contrast to core or C type that go to layer IV 28 Layer II edit Layer II the external granular layer contains small pyramidal neurons and numerous stellate neurons Layer III edit Layer III the external pyramidal layer contains predominantly small and medium size pyramidal neurons as well as non pyramidal neurons with vertically oriented intracortical axons layers I through III are the main target of interhemispheric corticocortical afferents and layer III is the principal source of corticocortical efferents Layer IV edit Layer IV the internal granular layer contains different types of stellate and pyramidal cells and is the main target of thalamocortical afferents from thalamus type C neurons core type 28 as well as intra hemispheric corticocortical afferents The layers above layer IV are also referred to as supragranular layers layers I III whereas the layers below are referred to as infragranular layers layers V and VI Layer V edit Layer V the internal pyramidal layer contains large pyramidal neurons Axons from these leave the cortex and connect with subcortical structures including the basal ganglia In the primary motor cortex of the frontal lobe layer V contains giant pyramidal cells called Betz cells whose axons travel through the internal capsule the brain stem and the spinal cord forming the corticospinal tract which is the main pathway for voluntary motor control Layer VI edit Layer VI the polymorphic or multiform layer contains few large pyramidal neurons and many small spindle like pyramidal and multiform neurons layer VI sends efferent fibers to the thalamus establishing a very precise reciprocal interconnection between the cortex and the thalamus 29 That is layer VI neurons from one cortical column connect with thalamus neurons that provide input to the same cortical column These connections are both excitatory and inhibitory Neurons send excitatory fibers to neurons in the thalamus and also send collaterals to the thalamic reticular nucleus that inhibit these same thalamus neurons or ones adjacent to them 30 One theory is that because the inhibitory output is reduced by cholinergic input to the cerebral cortex this provides the brainstem with adjustable gain control for the relay of lemniscal inputs 30 Columns edit The cortical layers are not simply stacked one over the other there exist characteristic connections between different layers and neuronal types which span all the thickness of the cortex These cortical microcircuits are grouped into cortical columns and minicolumns 31 It has been proposed that the minicolumns are the basic functional units of the cortex 32 In 1957 Vernon Mountcastle showed that the functional properties of the cortex change abruptly between laterally adjacent points however they are continuous in the direction perpendicular to the surface Later works have provided evidence of the presence of functionally distinct cortical columns in the visual cortex Hubel and Wiesel 1959 33 auditory cortex and associative cortex Cortical areas that lack a layer IV are called agranular Cortical areas that have only a rudimentary layer IV are called dysgranular 34 Information processing within each layer is determined by different temporal dynamics with that in layers II III having a slow 2 Hz oscillation while that in layer V has a fast 10 15 Hz oscillation 35 Types of cortex edit Based on the differences in laminar organization the cerebral cortex can be classified into two types the large area of neocortex which has six cell layers and the much smaller area of allocortex that has three or four layers 2 The neocortex is also known as the isocortex or neopallium and is the part of the mature cerebral cortex with six distinct layers Examples of neocortical areas include the granular primary motor cortex and the striate primary visual cortex The neocortex has two subtypes the true isocortex and the proisocortex which is a transitional region between the isocortex and the regions of the periallocortex The allocortex is the part of the cerebral cortex with three or four layers and has three subtypes the paleocortex with three cortical laminae the archicortex which has four or five and a transitional area adjacent to the allocortex the periallocortex Examples of allocortex are the olfactory cortex and the hippocampus There is a transitional area between the neocortex and the allocortex called the paralimbic cortex where layers 2 3 and 4 are merged This area incorporates the proisocortex of the neocortex and the periallocortex of the allocortex In addition the cerebral cortex may be classified into four lobes the frontal lobe temporal lobe the parietal lobe and the occipital lobe named from their overlying bones of the skull Blood supply and drainage editMain article Cerebral circulation nbsp Arterial supply showing the regions supplied by the posterior middle and anterior cerebral arteries Blood supply to the cerebral cortex is part of the cerebral circulation Cerebral arteries supply the blood that perfuses the cerebrum This arterial blood carries oxygen glucose and other nutrients to the cortex Cerebral veins drain the deoxygenated blood and metabolic wastes including carbon dioxide back to the heart The main arteries supplying the cortex are the anterior cerebral artery the middle cerebral artery and the posterior cerebral artery The anterior cerebral artery supplies the anterior portions of the brain including most of the frontal lobe The middle cerebral artery supplies the parietal lobes temporal lobes and parts of the occipital lobes The middle cerebral artery splits into two branches to supply the left and right hemisphere where they branch further The posterior cerebral artery supplies the occipital lobes The circle of Willis is the main blood system that deals with blood supply in the cerebrum and cerebral cortex nbsp Cortical blood supplyDevelopment editSee also Development of the cerebral cortex The prenatal development of the cerebral cortex is a complex and finely tuned process called corticogenesis influenced by the interplay between genes and the environment 36 Neural tube edit The cerebral cortex develops from the most anterior part the forebrain region of the neural tube 37 38 The neural plate folds and closes to form the neural tube From the cavity inside the neural tube develops the ventricular system and from the neuroepithelial cells of its walls the neurons and glia of the nervous system The most anterior front or cranial part of the neural plate the prosencephalon which is evident before neurulation begins gives rise to the cerebral hemispheres and later cortex 39 Cortical neuron development edit Further information Neurogenesis and Neuroepithelial cell Cortical neurons are generated within the ventricular zone next to the ventricles At first this zone contains neural stem cells that transition to radial glial cells progenitor cells which divide to produce glial cells and neurons 40 Radial glia edit nbsp Neurogenesis is shown in red and lamination is shown in blue Adapted from Sur et al 2001 The cerebral cortex is composed of a heterogenous population of cells that give rise to different cell types The majority of these cells are derived from radial glia migration that form the different cell types of the neocortex and it is a period associated with an increase in neurogenesis Similarly the process of neurogenesis regulates lamination to form the different layers of the cortex During this process there is an increase in the restriction of cell fate that begins with earlier progenitors giving rise to any cell type in the cortex and later progenitors giving rise only to neurons of superficial layers This differential cell fate creates an inside out topography in the cortex with younger neurons in superficial layers and older neurons in deeper layers In addition laminar neurons are stopped in S or G2 phase in order to give a fine distinction between the different cortical layers Laminar differentiation is not fully complete until after birth since during development laminar neurons are still sensitive to extrinsic signals and environmental cues 41 Although the majority of the cells that compose the cortex are derived locally from radial glia there is a subset population of neurons that migrate from other regions Radial glia give rise to neurons that are pyramidal in shape and use glutamate as a neurotransmitter however these migrating cells contribute neurons that are stellate shaped and use GABA as their main neurotransmitter These GABAergic neurons are generated by progenitor cells in the medial ganglionic eminence MGE that migrate tangentially to the cortex via the subventricular zone This migration of GABAergic neurons is particularly important since GABA receptors are excitatory during development This excitation is primarily driven by the flux of chloride ions through the GABA receptor however in adults chloride concentrations shift causing an inward flux of chloride that hyperpolarizes postsynaptic neurons 42 The glial fibers produced in the first divisions of the progenitor cells are radially oriented spanning the thickness of the cortex from the ventricular zone to the outer pial surface and provide scaffolding for the migration of neurons outwards from the ventricular zone 43 44 At birth there are very few dendrites present on the cortical neuron s cell body and the axon is undeveloped During the first year of life the dendrites become dramatically increased in number such that they can accommodate up to a hundred thousand synaptic connections with other neurons The axon can develop to extend a long way from the cell body 45 Asymmetric division edit The first divisions of the progenitor cells are symmetric which duplicates the total number of progenitor cells at each mitotic cycle Then some progenitor cells begin to divide asymmetrically producing one postmitotic cell that migrates along the radial glial fibers leaving the ventricular zone and one progenitor cell which continues to divide until the end of development when it differentiates into a glial cell or an ependymal cell As the G1 phase of mitosis is elongated in what is seen as selective cell cycle lengthening the newly born neurons migrate to more superficial layers of the cortex 46 The migrating daughter cells become the pyramidal cells of the cerebral cortex 47 The development process is time ordered and regulated by hundreds of genes and epigenetic regulatory mechanisms 48 Layer organization edit nbsp Human cortical development between 26 and 39 week gestational ageThe layered structure of the mature cerebral cortex is formed during development The first pyramidal neurons generated migrate out of the ventricular zone and subventricular zone together with reelin producing Cajal Retzius neurons from the preplate Next a cohort of neurons migrating into the middle of the preplate divides this transient layer into the superficial marginal zone which will become layer I of the mature neocortex and the subplate 49 forming a middle layer called the cortical plate These cells will form the deep layers of the mature cortex layers five and six Later born neurons migrate radially into the cortical plate past the deep layer neurons and become the upper layers two to four Thus the layers of the cortex are created in an inside out order 50 The only exception to this inside out sequence of neurogenesis occurs in the layer I of primates in which in contrast to rodents neurogenesis continues throughout the entire period of corticogenesis 51 Cortical patterning edit nbsp Depicted in blue Emx2 is highly expressed at the caudomedial pole and dissipates outward Pax6 expression is represented in purple and is highly expressed at the rostral lateral pole Adapted from Sanes D Reh T amp Harris W 2012 Development of the Nervous System 3rd ed Burlington Elsevier Science The map of functional cortical areas which include primary motor and visual cortex originates from a protomap 52 which is regulated by molecular signals such as fibroblast growth factor FGF8 early in embryonic development 53 54 These signals regulate the size shape and position of cortical areas on the surface of the cortical primordium in part by regulating gradients of transcription factor expression through a process called cortical patterning Examples of such transcription factors include the genes EMX2 and PAX6 55 Together both transcription factors form an opposing gradient of expression Pax6 is highly expressed at the rostral lateral pole while Emx2 is highly expressed in the caudomedial pole The establishment of this gradient is important for proper development For example mutations in Pax6 can cause expression levels of Emx2 to expand out of its normal expression domain which would ultimately lead to an expansion of the areas normally derived from the caudal medial cortex such as the visual cortex On the contrary if mutations in Emx2 occur it can cause the Pax6 expressing domain to expand and result in the frontal and motor cortical regions enlarging Therefore researchers believe that similar gradients and signaling centers next to the cortex could contribute to the regional expression of these transcription factors 42 Two very well studied patterning signals for the cortex include FGF and retinoic acid If FGFs are misexpressed in different areas of the developing cortex cortical patterning is disrupted Specifically when Fgf8 is increased in the anterior pole Emx2 is downregulated and a caudal shift in the cortical region occurs This ultimately causes an expansion of the rostral regions Therefore Fgf8 and other FGFs play a role in the regulation of expression of Emx2 and Pax6 and represent how the cerebral cortex can become specialized for different functions 42 Rapid expansion of the cortical surface area is regulated by the amount of self renewal of radial glial cells and is partly regulated by FGF and Notch genes 56 During the period of cortical neurogenesis and layer formation many higher mammals begin the process of gyrification which generates the characteristic folds of the cerebral cortex 57 58 Gyrification is regulated by a DNA associated protein Trnp1 59 and by FGF and SHH signaling 60 61 Evolution editSee also Pallium neuroanatomy Evolution Of all the different brain regions the cerebral cortex shows the largest evolutionary variation and has evolved most recently 6 In contrast to the highly conserved circuitry of the medulla oblongata for example which serves critical functions such as regulation of heart and respiration rates many areas of the cerebral cortex are not strictly necessary for survival Thus the evolution of the cerebral cortex has seen the advent and modification of new functional areas particularly association areas that do not directly receive input from outside the cortex 6 A key theory of cortical evolution is embodied in the radial unit hypothesis and related protomap hypothesis first proposed by Rakic 62 This theory states that new cortical areas are formed by the addition of new radial units which is accomplished at the stem cell level The protomap hypothesis states that the cellular and molecular identity and characteristics of neurons in each cortical area are specified by cortical stem cells known as radial glial cells in a primordial map This map is controlled by secreted signaling proteins and downstream transcription factors 63 64 65 Function edit nbsp Some functional areas of cortexConnections edit The cerebral cortex is connected to various subcortical structures such as the thalamus and the basal ganglia sending information to them along efferent connections and receiving information from them via afferent connections Most sensory information is routed to the cerebral cortex via the thalamus Olfactory information however passes through the olfactory bulb to the olfactory cortex piriform cortex The majority of connections are from one area of the cortex to another rather than from subcortical areas Braitenberg and Schuz 1998 claim that in primary sensory areas at the cortical level where the input fibers terminate up to 20 of the synapses are supplied by extracortical afferents but that in other areas and other layers the percentage is likely to be much lower 66 Cortical areas edit See also Cortical map The whole of the cerebral cortex was divided into 52 different areas in an early presentation by Korbinian Brodmann These areas known as Brodmann areas are based on their cytoarchitecture but also relate to various functions An example is Brodmann area 17 which is the primary visual cortex In more general terms the cortex is typically described as comprising three parts sensory motor and association areas Sensory areas edit nbsp Motor and sensory regions of the cerebral cortex nbsp Motor and sensory regions of the cerebral cortexThe sensory areas are the cortical areas that receive and process information from the senses Parts of the cortex that receive sensory inputs from the thalamus are called primary sensory areas The senses of vision hearing and touch are served by the primary visual cortex primary auditory cortex and primary somatosensory cortex respectively In general the two hemispheres receive information from the opposite contralateral side of the body For example the right primary somatosensory cortex receives information from the left limbs and the right visual cortex receives information from the left visual field The organization of sensory maps in the cortex reflects that of the corresponding sensing organ in what is known as a topographic map Neighboring points in the primary visual cortex for example correspond to neighboring points in the retina This topographic map is called a retinotopic map In the same way there exists a tonotopic map in the primary auditory cortex and a somatotopic map in the primary sensory cortex This last topographic map of the body onto the posterior central gyrus has been illustrated as a deformed human representation the somatosensory homunculus where the size of different body parts reflects the relative density of their innervation Areas with much sensory innervation such as the fingertips and the lips require more cortical area to process finer sensation Motor areas edit The motor areas are located in both hemispheres of the cortex The motor areas are very closely related to the control of voluntary movements especially fine fragmented movements performed by the hand The right half of the motor area controls the left side of the body and vice versa Two areas of the cortex are commonly referred to as motor Primary motor cortex which executes voluntary movements citation needed Supplementary motor areas and premotor cortex which select voluntary movements citation needed In addition motor functions have been described for Posterior parietal cortex which guides voluntary movements in space Dorsolateral prefrontal cortex which decides which voluntary movements to make according to higher order instructions rules and self generated thoughts Just underneath the cerebral cortex are interconnected subcortical masses of grey matter called basal ganglia or nuclei The basal ganglia receive input from the substantia nigra of the midbrain and motor areas of the cerebral cortex and send signals back to both of these locations They are involved in motor control They are found lateral to the thalamus The main components of the basal ganglia are the caudate nucleus the putamen the globus pallidus the substantia nigra the nucleus accumbens and the subthalamic nucleus The putamen and globus pallidus are also collectively known as the lentiform nucleus because together they form a lens shaped body The putamen and caudate nucleus are also collectively called the corpus striatum after their striped appearance 67 68 Association areas edit nbsp Cortical areas involved in speech processing The association areas are the parts of the cerebral cortex that do not belong to the primary regions They function to produce a meaningful perceptual experience of the world enable us to interact effectively and support abstract thinking and language The parietal temporal and occipital lobes all located in the posterior part of the cortex integrate sensory information and information stored in memory The frontal lobe or prefrontal association complex is involved in planning actions and movement as well as abstract thought Globally the association areas are organized as distributed networks 69 Each network connects areas distributed across widely spaced regions of the cortex Distinct networks are positioned adjacent to one another yielding a complex series of interwoven networks The specific organization of the association networks is debated with evidence for interactions hierarchical relationships and competition between networks In humans association networks are particularly important to language function In the past it was theorized that language abilities are localized in Broca s area in areas of the left inferior frontal gyrus BA44 and BA45 for language expression and in Wernicke s area BA22 for language reception However the processes of language expression and reception have been shown to occur in areas other than just those structures around the lateral sulcus including the frontal lobe basal ganglia cerebellum and pons 70 Clinical significance editFurther information Central nervous system disease and Developmental toxicity nbsp Hemodynamic changes observed on gyrencephalic brain cortex after an arterial vessel occlusion in IOS The video has a speed of 50x to better appreciate the spreading depolarization over the brain cortex Pictures are dynamically subtracted to a reference picture 40 s before First we see the initial are of change at the exact moment where the middle cerebral artery group left is occluded The area is highlighted with a white line Later we appreciate the signal produced by Spreading Depolarizations We see markedly the front of waves 71 https doi org 10 1007 s00701 019 04132 8Neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer s disease show as a marker an atrophy of the grey matter of the cerebral cortex 72 Other diseases of the central nervous system include neurological disorders such as epilepsy movement disorders and different types of aphasia difficulties in speech expression or comprehension Brain damage from disease or trauma can involve damage to a specific lobe such as in frontal lobe disorder and associated functions will be affected The blood brain barrier that serves to protect the brain from infection can become compromised allowing entry to pathogens The developing fetus is susceptible to a range of environmental factors that can cause birth defects and problems in later development Maternal alcohol consumption for example can cause fetal alcohol spectrum disorder 73 Other factors that can cause neurodevelopment disorders are toxicants such as drugs and exposure to radiation as from X rays Infections can also affect the development of the cortex A viral infection is one of the causes of lissencephaly which results in a smooth cortex without gyrification A type of electrocorticography called cortical stimulation mapping is an invasive procedure that involves placing electrodes directly onto the exposed brain in order to localise the functions of specific areas of the cortex It is used in clinical and therapeutic applications including pre surgical mapping 74 Genes associated with cortical disorders edit There are a number of genetic mutations that can cause a wide range of genetic disorders of the cerebral cortex including microcephaly schizencephaly and types of lissencephaly 75 Chromosome abnormalities can also result causing a number of neurodevelopmental disorders such as fragile X syndrome and Rett syndrome MCPH1 codes for microcephalin and disorders in this and in ASPM are associated with microcephaly 75 Mutations in the gene NBS1 that codes for nibrin can cause Nijmegen breakage syndrome characterised by microcephaly 75 Mutations in EMX2 76 and COL4A1 are associated with schizencephaly 77 a condition marked by the absence of large parts of the cerebral hemispheres History editIn 1909 Korbinian Brodmann distinguished different areas of the neocortex based on cytoarchitectural difference and divided the cerebral cortex into 52 regions 78 Rafael Lorente de No a student of Santiago Ramon y Cajal identified more than 40 different types of cortical neurons based on the distribution of their dendrites and axons 78 Other animals editSee also Barrel cortex The cerebral cortex is derived from the pallium a layered structure found in the forebrain of all vertebrates The basic form of the pallium is a cylindrical layer enclosing fluid filled ventricles Around the circumference of the cylinder are four zones the dorsal pallium medial pallium ventral pallium and lateral pallium which are thought to be homologous to the neocortex hippocampus amygdala and olfactory cortex respectively Until recently no counterpart to the cerebral cortex had been recognized in invertebrates However a study published in the journal Cell in 2010 based on gene expression profiles reported strong affinities between the cerebral cortex and the mushroom bodies of the ragworm Platynereis dumerilii 79 Mushroom bodies are structures in the brains of many types of worms and arthropods that are known to play important roles in learning and memory the genetic evidence indicates a common evolutionary origin and therefore indicates that the origins of the earliest precursors of the cerebral cortex date back to the Precambrian era Additional images edit nbsp Lateral surface of the human cerebral cortex nbsp Medial surface of the human cerebral cortexSee also editBrain computer interface Cortical dysplasia Cortical homunculus Eloquent cortex EMX1 Gray matter heterotopia Limbic system List of regions in the human brain Insular cortexReferences edit cerebral mantle TheFreeDictionary com a b Strominger Norman L Demarest Robert J Laemle Lois B 2012 Cerebral Cortex Noback s Human Nervous System Seventh Edition Humana Press pp 429 451 doi 10 1007 978 1 61779 779 8 25 ISBN 978 1 61779 778 1 a b c d e f Saladin Kenneth 2011 Human anatomy 3rd ed McGraw Hill pp 416 422 ISBN 9780071222075 a b Shipp Stewart 2007 06 17 Structure and function of the cerebral cortex Current Biology 17 12 R443 9 doi 10 1016 j cub 2007 03 044 PMC 1870400 PMID 17580069 Fernandez V Llinares Benadero C Borrell V 17 May 2016 Cerebral cortex expansion and folding what have we learned The EMBO Journal 35 10 1021 44 doi 10 15252 embj 201593701 PMC 4868950 PMID 27056680 a b c d Rakic P October 2009 Evolution of the neocortex a perspective from developmental biology Nature Reviews Neuroscience 10 10 724 35 doi 10 1038 nrn2719 PMC 2913577 PMID 19763105 Principles of neural science 4th ed McGraw Hill Health Professions Division 2000 01 05 ISBN 978 0838577011 a b c Roberts P 1992 Neuroanatomy 3rd ed Springer Verlag pp 86 92 ISBN 9780387977775 Lodato Simona Arlotta Paola 2015 11 13 Generating Neuronal Diversity in the Mammalian Cerebral Cortex Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology 31 1 699 720 doi 10 1146 annurev cellbio 100814 125353 PMC 4778709 PMID 26359774 Functional columns were first defined in the cortex by Mountcastle 1957 who proposed the columnar hypothesis which states that the cortex is composed of discrete modular columns of neurons characterized by a consistent connectivity profile Ansen Wilson LJ Lipinski RJ January 2017 Gene environment interactions in cortical interneuron development and dysfunction A review of preclinical studies Neurotoxicology 58 120 129 doi 10 1016 j neuro 2016 12 002 PMC 5328258 PMID 27932026 Carpenter 1985 Core text of neuroanatomy 3rd ed Williams amp Wilkins pp 348 358 ISBN 978 0683014556 Toro Roberto Perron Michel Pike Bruce Richer Louis Veillette Suzanne Pausova Zdenka Paus Tomas 2008 10 01 Brain Size and Folding of the Human Cerebral Cortex Cerebral Cortex 18 10 2352 2357 doi 10 1093 cercor bhm261 ISSN 1047 3211 PMID 18267953 Nieuwenhuys R 2012 The insular cortex a review Progress in Brain Research Vol 195 pp 123 63 doi 10 1016 B978 0 444 53860 4 00007 6 PMID 22230626 Tortora G Derrickson B 2011 Principles of anatomy amp physiology 13th ed Wiley p 549 ISBN 9780470646083 a b Nieuwenhuys R Donkelaar HJ Nicholson C 1998 The central nervous system of vertebrates Volume 1 Springer pp 2011 2012 ISBN 978 3 540 56013 5 Frithjof Kruggel Martina K Bruckner Thomas Arendt Christopher J Wiggins D Yves von Cramon 2003 Analyzing the neocortical fine structure Medical Image Analysis 7 3 251 264 doi 10 1016 S1361 8415 03 00006 9 hdl 11858 00 001M 0000 0010 9C60 3 PMID 12946467 Katherine L Narr Roger P Woods Paul M Thompson Philip Szeszko Dilbert Robinson Teodora Dimtcheva Mala Gurbani Arthur W Toga Robert M Bilder 2007 Relationships between IQ and Regional Cortical Grey Matter Thickness in Healthy Adults Cerebral Cortex 17 9 2163 2171 doi 10 1093 cercor bhl125 PMID 17118969 Alexandre F M DaSilva Cristina Granziera Josh Snyder Nouchine Hadjikhani 2007 Thickening in the somatosensory cortex of patients with migraine Neurology 69 21 1990 1995 doi 10 1212 01 wnl 0000291618 32247 2d PMC 3757544 PMID 18025393 Catharine Paddock 2007 11 20 Migraine Sufferers Have Thicker Brain Cortex Medical News Today Archived from the original on 2008 05 11 Datte R Detre JA et al Oct 2011 Absence of changes in cortical thickness in patients with migraine Cephalalgia 31 14 1452 8 doi 10 1177 0333102411421025 PMC 3512201 PMID 21911412 Habib M 2000 The neurological basis of developmental dyslexia an overview and working hypothesis Brain 123 12 2373 99 doi 10 1093 brain 123 12 2373 PMID 11099442 Scientists identify a new kind of human brain cell Allen Institute 27 August 2018 Meyer Gundela Goffinet Andre M Fairen Alfonso 1999 Feature Article What is a Cajal Retzius cell A Reassessment of a Classical Cell Type Based on Recent Observations in the Developing Neocortex Cerebral Cortex 9 8 765 775 doi 10 1093 cercor 9 8 765 PMID 10600995 Judas Milos Pletikos Mihovil 2010 The discovery of the subpial granular layer in the human cerebral cortex Translational Neuroscience 1 3 255 260 doi 10 2478 v10134 010 0037 4 S2CID 143409890 Gilbert CD Sigman M 2007 Brain states top down influences in sensory processing Neuron 54 5 677 96 doi 10 1016 j neuron 2007 05 019 hdl 11336 67502 PMID 17553419 Cauller L 1995 Layer I of primary sensory neocortex where top down converges upon bottom up Behav Brain Res 71 1 2 163 70 doi 10 1016 0166 4328 95 00032 1 PMID 8747184 S2CID 4015532 Rubio Garrido P Perez de Manzo F Porrero C Galazo MJ Clasca F 2009 Thalamic input to distal apical dendrites in neocortical layer 1 is massive and highly convergent Cereb Cortex 19 10 2380 95 doi 10 1093 cercor bhn259 PMID 19188274 a b Jones EG 1998 Viewpoint the core and matrix of thalamic organization Neuroscience 85 2 331 45 doi 10 1016 S0306 4522 97 00581 2 PMID 9622234 S2CID 17846130 Creutzfeldt O 1995 Cortex Cerebri Springer Verlag a b Lam YW Sherman SM 2010 Functional Organization of the Somatosensory Cortical Layer 6 Feedback to the Thalamus Cereb Cortex 20 1 13 24 doi 10 1093 cercor bhp077 PMC 2792186 PMID 19447861 Suzuki IK Hirata T January 2013 Neocortical neurogenesis is not really neo a new evolutionary model derived from a comparative study of chick pallial development PDF Development Growth amp Differentiation 55 1 173 87 doi 10 1111 dgd 12020 PMID 23230908 S2CID 36706690 Mountcastle V 1997 The columnar organization of the neocortex Brain 120 4 701 722 doi 10 1093 brain 120 4 701 PMID 9153131 Hubel DH Wiesel TN October 1959 Receptive fields of single neurones in the cat s striate cortex The Journal of Physiology 148 3 574 91 doi 10 1113 jphysiol 1959 sp006308 PMC 1363130 PMID 14403679 S M Dombrowski C C Hilgetag and H Barbas Quantitative Architecture Distinguishes Prefrontal Cortical Systems in the Rhesus Monkey Archived 2008 08 29 at the Wayback Machine Cereb Cortex 11 975 988 they either lack agranular or have only a rudimentary granular layer IV dysgranular Sun W Dan Y 2009 Layer specific network oscillation and spatiotemporal receptive field in the visual cortex Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 106 42 17986 17991 Bibcode 2009PNAS 10617986S doi 10 1073 pnas 0903962106 PMC 2764922 PMID 19805197 Pletikos Mihovil Sousa Andre MM et al 22 January 2014 Temporal Specification and Bilaterality of Human Neocortical Topographic Gene Expression Neuron 81 2 321 332 doi 10 1016 j neuron 2013 11 018 PMC 3931000 PMID 24373884 Wolpert Lewis 2015 Principles of development Fifth ed UK Oxford University Press p 533 ISBN 9780199678143 Warren N Caric D Pratt T Clausen JA Asavaritikrai P Mason JO Hill RE Price DJ 1999 The transcription factor Pax6 is required for cell proliferation and differentiation in the developing cerebral cortex Cerebral Cortex 9 6 627 35 doi 10 1093 cercor 9 6 627 PMID 10498281 Larsen W J Human Embryology 3rd edition 2001 pp 421 422 ISBN 0 443 06583 7 Stephen C Noctor Alexander C Flint Tamily A Weissman Ryan S Dammerman amp Arnold R Kriegstein 2001 Neurons derived from radial glial cells establish radial units in neocortex Nature 409 6821 714 720 Bibcode 2001Natur 409 714N doi 10 1038 35055553 PMID 11217860 S2CID 3041502 Sur Mriganka Leamey Catherine A 2001 Development and Plasticity of Cortical Areas and Networks Nature Reviews Neuroscience 2 4 251 262 doi 10 1038 35067562 PMID 11283748 S2CID 893478 a b c Sanes Dan H Reh Thomas A Harris William A 2012 Development of the Nervous System Elsevier Inc ISBN 978 0 12 374539 2 Rakic P October 2009 Evolution of the neocortex a perspective from developmental biology Nature Reviews Neuroscience 10 10 724 35 doi 10 1038 nrn2719 PMC 2913577 PMID 19763105 Rakic P November 1972 Extrinsic cytological determinants of basket and stellate cell dendritic pattern in the cerebellar molecular layer The Journal of Comparative Neurology 146 3 335 54 doi 10 1002 cne 901460304 PMID 4628749 S2CID 31900267 Gilbert Scott 2006 Developmental biology 8th ed Sinauer Associates Publishers pp 394 395 ISBN 9780878932504 Calegari F Haubensack W Haffner C Huttner WB 2005 Selective lengthening of the cell cycle in the neurogenic subpopulation of neural progenitor cells during mouse brain development The Journal of Neuroscience 25 28 6533 8 doi 10 1523 jneurosci 0778 05 2005 PMC 6725437 PMID 16014714 P Rakic 1988 Specification of cerebral cortical areas Science 241 4862 170 176 Bibcode 1988Sci 241 170R doi 10 1126 science 3291116 PMID 3291116 Hu X L Wang Y Shen Q 2012 Epigenetic control on cell fate choice in neural stem cells Protein amp Cell 3 4 278 290 doi 10 1007 s13238 012 2916 6 PMC 4729703 PMID 22549586 Kostovic Ivica 1990 Developmental history of the transient subplate zone in the visual and somatosensory cortex of the macaque monkey and human brain Journal of Comparative Neurology 297 3 441 470 doi 10 1002 cne 902970309 PMID 2398142 S2CID 21371568 Rakic P 1 February 1974 Neurons in rhesus monkey visual cortex systematic relation between time of origin and eventual disposition Science 183 4123 425 7 Bibcode 1974Sci 183 425R doi 10 1126 science 183 4123 425 PMID 4203022 S2CID 10881759 Zecevic N Rakic P 2001 Development of layer I neurons in the primate cerebral cortex The Journal of Neuroscience 21 15 5607 19 doi 10 1523 JNEUROSCI 21 15 05607 2001 PMC 6762645 PMID 11466432 Rakic P 8 July 1988 Specification of cerebral cortical areas Science 241 4862 170 6 Bibcode 1988Sci 241 170R doi 10 1126 science 3291116 PMID 3291116 Fukuchi Shimogori T Grove EA 2 November 2001 Neocortex patterning by the secreted signaling molecule FGF8 Science 294 5544 1071 4 Bibcode 2001Sci 294 1071F doi 10 1126 science 1064252 PMID 11567107 S2CID 14807054 Garel S Huffman KJ Rubenstein JL May 2003 Molecular regionalization of the neocortex is disrupted in Fgf8 hypomorphic mutants Development 130 9 1903 14 doi 10 1242 dev 00416 PMID 12642494 S2CID 6533589 Bishop KM Goudreau G O Leary DD 14 April 2000 Regulation of area identity in the mammalian neocortex by Emx2 and Pax6 Science 288 5464 344 9 Bibcode 2000Sci 288 344B doi 10 1126 science 288 5464 344 PMID 10764649 Rash BG Lim HD Breunig JJ Vaccarino FM 26 October 2011 FGF signaling expands embryonic cortical surface area by regulating Notch dependent neurogenesis The Journal of Neuroscience 31 43 15604 17 doi 10 1523 jneurosci 4439 11 2011 PMC 3235689 PMID 22031906 Rajagopalan V Scott J Habas PA Kim K Corbett Detig J Rousseau F Barkovich AJ Glenn OA Studholme C 23 February 2011 Local tissue growth patterns underlying normal fetal human brain gyrification quantified in utero The Journal of Neuroscience 31 8 2878 87 doi 10 1523 jneurosci 5458 10 2011 PMC 3093305 PMID 21414909 Lui Jan H Hansen David V Kriegstein Arnold R 2011 07 08 Development and evolution of the human neocortex Cell 146 1 18 36 doi 10 1016 j cell 2011 06 030 ISSN 1097 4172 PMC 3610574 PMID 21729779 Stahl Ronny Walcher Tessa De Juan Romero Camino Pilz Gregor Alexander Cappello Silvia Irmler Martin Sanz Aquela Jose Miguel Beckers Johannes Blum Robert 2013 04 25 Trnp1 regulates expansion and folding of the mammalian cerebral cortex by control of radial glial fate Cell 153 3 535 549 doi 10 1016 j cell 2013 03 027 ISSN 1097 4172 PMID 23622239 Wang Lei Hou Shirui Han Young Goo 2016 05 23 Hedgehog signaling promotes basal progenitor expansion and the growth and folding of the neocortex Nature Neuroscience 19 7 888 96 doi 10 1038 nn 4307 ISSN 1546 1726 PMC 4925239 PMID 27214567 Rash Brian G Tomasi Simone Lim H David Suh Carol Y Vaccarino Flora M 2013 06 26 Cortical gyrification induced by fibroblast growth factor 2 in the mouse brain The Journal of Neuroscience 33 26 10802 10814 doi 10 1523 JNEUROSCI 3621 12 2013 ISSN 1529 2401 PMC 3693057 PMID 23804101 Rakic P 8 July 1988 Specification of cerebral cortical areas Science 241 4862 170 6 Bibcode 1988Sci 241 170R doi 10 1126 science 3291116 PMID 3291116 Fukuchi Shimogori T Grove EA 2 November 2001 Neocortex patterning by the secreted signaling molecule FGF8 Science 294 5544 1071 4 Bibcode 2001Sci 294 1071F doi 10 1126 science 1064252 PMID 11567107 S2CID 14807054 Bishop KM Goudreau G O Leary DD 14 April 2000 Regulation of area identity in the mammalian neocortex by Emx2 and Pax6 Science 288 5464 344 9 Bibcode 2000Sci 288 344B doi 10 1126 science 288 5464 344 PMID 10764649 Grove EA Fukuchi Shimogori T 2003 Generating the cerebral cortical area map Annual Review of Neuroscience 26 355 80 doi 10 1146 annurev neuro 26 041002 131137 PMID 14527269 S2CID 12282525 Braitenberg V and Schuz A 1998 Cortex Statistics and Geometry of Neuronal Connectivity Second thoroughly revised edition New York Springer Verlag Saladin Kenneth Anatomy and Physiology The Unity of Form and Function 5th Ed New York McGraw Hill Companies Inc 2010 Print Dorland s Medical Dictionary for Health Consumers 2008 Yeo BT Krienen FM Sepulcre J Sabuncu MR Lashkari D Hollinshead M Roffman JL Smoller JW Zollei L Polimeni JR Fischl B Liu H Buckner RL 2011 The organization of the human cerebral cortex estimated by intrinsic functional connectivity Journal of Neurophysiology 106 3 1125 1165 doi 10 1152 jn 00338 2011 PMC 3174820 PMID 21653723 Cathy J Price 2000 The anatomy of language contributions from functional neuroimaging Journal of Anatomy 197 3 335 359 doi 10 1046 j 1469 7580 2000 19730335 x PMC 1468137 PMID 11117622 Kentar Modar Mann Martina Sahm Felix Olivares Rivera Arturo Sanchez Porras Renan Zerelles Roland Sakowitz Oliver W Unterberg Andreas W Santos Edgar 2020 01 15 Detection of spreading depolarizations in a middle cerebral artery occlusion model in swine Acta Neurochirurgica 162 3 581 592 doi 10 1007 s00701 019 04132 8 ISSN 0942 0940 PMID 31940093 S2CID 210196036 Nakazawa T Ohara T Hirabayashi N Furuta Y Hata J Shibata M Honda T Kitazono T Nakao T Ninomiya T March 2022 Multiple region grey matter atrophy as a predictor for the development of dementia in a community the Hisayama Study J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 93 3 263 271 doi 10 1136 jnnp 2021 326611 PMC 8862082 PMID 34670843 Mukherjee Raja A S Hollins Sheila 2006 Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder An Overview Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 99 6 298 302 doi 10 1177 014107680609900616 PMC 1472723 PMID 16738372 Tarapore PE et al August 2012 Preoperative multimodal motor mapping a comparison of magnetoencephalography imaging navigated transcranial magnetic stimulation and direct cortical stimulation Journal of Neurosurgery 117 2 354 62 doi 10 3171 2012 5 JNS112124 PMC 4060619 PMID 22702484 a b c Walsh Christopher A Mochida Ganeshwaran H 1 May 2004 Genetic Basis of Developmental Malformations of the Cerebral Cortex Archives of Neurology 61 5 637 640 doi 10 1001 archneur 61 5 637 PMID 15148137 EMX2 empty spiracles homeobox 2 Homo sapiens human Gene NCBI www ncbi nlm nih gov Smigiel R Cabala M Jakubiak A Kodera H Sasiadek MJ Matsumoto N Sasiadek MM Saitsu H April 2016 Novel COL4A1 mutation in an infant with severe dysmorphic syndrome with schizencephaly periventricular calcifications and cataract resembling congenital infection Birth Defects Research Part A Clinical and Molecular Teratology 106 4 304 7 doi 10 1002 bdra 23488 PMID 26879631 a b Principles of neural science Kandel Eric R 5th ed New York 2013 pp 347 348 ISBN 9780071390118 OCLC 795553723 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link Tomer R Denes AS Tessmar Raible K Arendt D Tomer R Denes AS Tessmar Raible K Arendt D 2010 Profiling by image registration reveals common origin of annelid mushroom bodies and vertebrate pallium Cell 142 5 800 809 doi 10 1016 j cell 2010 07 043 PMID 20813265 S2CID 917306 External links edithier 20 at NeuroNames Stained brain slice images which include the cerebral cortex at the BrainMaps project The primary visual cortex Webvision Comprehensive article about the structure and function of the primary visual cortex Basic cell types Webvision Image of the basic cell types of the monkey cerebral cortex Cerebral Cortex Cell Centered Database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cerebral cortex amp oldid 1182255462, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.