Abstract

Frontotemporal dysconnectivity is a key pathology in schizophrenia. The specific nature of this dysconnectivity is unknown, but animal models imply dysfunctional theta phase coupling between hippocampus and medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC). We tested this hypothesis by examining neural dynamics in 18 participants with a schizophrenia diagnosis, both medicated and unmedicated; and 26 age, sex and IQ matched control subjects. All participants completed two tasks known to elicit hippocampal-prefrontal theta coupling: a spatial memory task (during magnetoencephalography) and a memory integration task. In addition, an overlapping group of 33 schizophrenia and 29 control subjects underwent PET to measure the availability of GABAARs expressing the α5 subunit (concentrated on hippocampal somatostatin interneurons). We demonstrate-in the spatial memory task, during memory recall-that theta power increases in left medial temporal lobe (mTL) are impaired in schizophrenia, as is theta phase coupling between mPFC and mTL. Importantly, the latter cannot be explained by theta power changes, head movement, antipsychotics, cannabis use, or IQ, and is not found in other frequency bands. Moreover, mPFC-mTL theta coupling correlated strongly with performance in controls, but not in subjects with schizophrenia, who were mildly impaired at the spatial memory task and no better than chance on the memory integration task. Finally, mTL regions showing reduced phase coupling in schizophrenia magnetoencephalography participants overlapped substantially with areas of diminished α5-GABAAR availability in the wider schizophrenia PET sample. These results indicate that mPFC-mTL dysconnectivity in schizophrenia is due to a loss of theta phase coupling, and imply α5-GABAARs (and the cells that express them) have a role in this process.

Highlights

  • Schizophrenia—characterized by delusions, hallucinations, and motivational and cognitive impairments—has long been hypothesized to be a disorder of functional brain connectivity (Friston, 1999)

  • We have shown that medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC)-medial temporal lobe (mTL) dysconnectivity during memory retrieval in schizophrenia is characterized by a loss of theta phase coupling

  • This coupling loss in schizophrenia was not explained by the co-existing loss of mTL theta power, head movements, antipsychotic medication or cannabis use

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Summary

Introduction

Schizophrenia—characterized by delusions, hallucinations, and motivational and cognitive impairments—has long been hypothesized to be a disorder of functional brain connectivity (Friston, 1999). Most direct projections from anterior hippocampus to prefrontal cortex in humans (Croxson et al, 2005) and nonhuman primates (Barbas and Blatt, 1995) terminate in medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) This direct, unidirectional hippocampal-mPFC projection is heavily implicated in functions relevant to psychiatric disorders, e.g. working memory, context-dependent memory, planning, decision-making, and contextual regulation of fear (Godsil et al, 2013). Both participants with a diagnosis of schizophrenia and their unaffected relatives are substantially impaired at spatial working memory tasks (Park et al, 1995; Fleming et al, 1997; Glahn et al, 2003). The strength of theta phase coupling between these regions in rodents correlates with memory performance for spatial, contextual and reward contingency associations (Jones and Wilson, 2005; Benchenane et al, 2010; Hyman et al, 2010; Kim et al, 2011)

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