• Home
  • Uncategorized
  • Thermodynamic connectivity reveals functional specialization and multiplex organization of extrasynaptic signaling

arXiv:2604.02057v1 Announce Type: new
Abstract: Neural communication operates on both fast synaptic transmission and slower, diffusive extrasynaptic signaling, yet how these two modes jointly organize brain function remains unclear. Here, using the complete synaptic and neuropeptidergic connectomes of emphCaenorhabditis elegans, we develop a unified multiplex framework linking anatomical wiring to functional communication. We infer structure-derived functional connectivity from the synaptic connectome using equilibrium principles from statistical physics, yielding a probabilistic map of information flow across all synaptic pathways, and compare this functional layer directly with the extrasynaptic connectome. This reveals a principled functional specialization across four communication regimes: (i) a topology-dependent layer that reinforces and stabilizes synaptic motor circuits, (ii) a topology-resilient modulatory layer supporting global regulation and behavioral state control, (iii) a purely extrasynaptic network sustaining survival and homeostasis, and (iv) a purely synaptic regime mediating rapid, low-latency sensorimotor processing. Together, these findings reveal that synaptic and extrasynaptic signaling form complementary architectures optimized for speed, modulation, robustness, and survival, and provide a general strategy for integrating structural and modulatory connectomes to understand how distinct communication modes cooperate to sustain coherent brain function.

Subscribe for Updates

Copyright 2025 dijee Intelligence Ltd.   dijee Intelligence Ltd. is a private limited company registered in England and Wales at Media House, Sopers Road, Cuffley, Hertfordshire, EN6 4RY, UK registration number 16808844