Cortical myelination networks reflect neuronal gene expression and track adolescent age in marmosets
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Structural similarity provides a powerful framework for measuring coordinated macro- and microstructural variation across the cortex of a single brain. Similarity networks derived from myelin-sensitive MRI sequences undergo marked reorganisation during adolescence, linked to psychosocial outcomes in humans and rodents. However, the cellular mechanisms of myelination similarity and its development in non-human primate cortex remain unexplored. Here, we used myelin-sensitive T1w/T2w ratio images from a cross-sectional sample of 446 common marmosets (aged 0.62 to 12.75 years) to estimate cortical similarity networks in individual animals. Cortical areas with similar myeloarchitecture showed highly similar patterns of gene co-expression in glutamatergic neurons and PV+ and VIP+ interneurons, reflecting the activity dependence of myelination. A reliable age-based signal exists within network features, with coordinated developmental trajectories observed across the cortical hierarchy from primary to transmodal association cortices - a pattern that mirrors findings in human cortex. Taken together, marmosets demonstrate phylogenetically conserved patterns of myelination network development, potentially underpinned by key neuronal cell types that shape the functional specialisation of cortical areas.