By scanning the brains of mice throughout their lifespans, scientists at Columbia's Zuckerman Institute and the University of Texas at Dallas have discovered that the human brain is not unique in how it changes with age. These findings might one day help researchers pinpoint mechanisms in humans that confer vulnerability to, or grant resilience from, age-related brain decline, diseases and disorders.

fMRI scans of human (left) and mouse (right) brains revealed patterns of connectivity (circles) that change with age Image Credit: Ezra Winter-Nelson
Their research was published online in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The discovery that the brains of humans and mice age in similar ways may one day help scientists understand the factors underlying brain changes during aging. This knowledge can then help researchers find strategies to slow, halt or potentially reverse these declines.
“By looking at mice, we can see if, say, a change in diet in their youth has an effect on them in old age, and we don't have to wait 80 years for results as we would with humans,” said study co-senior author Itamar Kahn, PhD, a principal investigator at Columbia's Zuckerman Institute who is also an associate professor of neuroscience at Columbia's Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons.
The human brain, the most complex organ, operates as a network of interconnected modules specialized for tasks, such as perceiving colors or recognizing faces. Previous research found these modules become less specialized as people age, a breakdown associated with worse memory and other forms of cognitive decline.
Much remains unknown about the chemical and cellular machinery underlying this age-related brain decline, as well as ways in which genes, lifestyle, environment or medicine might alter its trajectory. To shed light on this mystery, in the new study, researchers used a non-invasive technology called functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to scan the brains of 82 mice at several intervals from ages 3 to 20 months, roughly corresponding to ages 18 to 70 years in humans.
fMRI is an imaging method that detects changes in blood flow to the brain. However, the brains of mice are roughly 3,000 times smaller in volume than those of humans, so the researchers needed special strategies for imaging. For instance, the scientists used fMRI scanners with magnetic fields more than three times stronger than ones often used in humans, which let them image smaller details.
Just as most people are awake during MRIs, Dr. Kahn's lab is one of the few in the world that is able to capture images of the brains of mice while they are awake.
The scientists discovered that aging mice, much like people, experienced a decline in how their different specialized brain modules interacted.
“The way the brain's modules relate together as a whole is a measure of brain health that appears to apply similarly in both humans and mice,” said study lead author Ezra Winter-Nelson, a doctoral student at the lab of study co-senior author Gagan Wig, PhD, an associate professor of psychology at the University of Texas at Dallas.
The scientists also found significant differences between human and mouse brains. For instance, mouse brain modules communicated less with each other than human ones.
