Abstract

Understanding brain reserve in preclinical stages of neurodegenerative disorders allows determination of which brain regions contribute to normal functioning despite accelerated neuronal loss. Besides the recruitment of additional regions, a reorganisation and shift of relevance between normally engaged regions are a suggested key mechanism. Thus, network analysis methods seem critical for investigation of changes in directed causal interactions between such candidate brain regions. To identify core compensatory regions, fifteen preclinical patients carrying the genetic mutation leading to Huntington's disease and twelve controls underwent fMRI scanning. They accomplished an auditory paced finger sequence tapping task, which challenged cognitive as well as executive aspects of motor functioning by varying speed and complexity of movements. To investigate causal interactions among brain regions a single Dynamic Causal Model (DCM) was constructed and fitted to the data from each subject. The DCM parameters were analysed using statistical methods to assess group differences in connectivity, and the relationship between connectivity patterns and predicted years to clinical onset was assessed in gene carriers.In preclinical patients, we found indications for neural reserve mechanisms predominantly driven by bilateral dorsal premotor cortex, which increasingly activated superior parietal cortices the closer individuals were to estimated clinical onset. This compensatory mechanism was restricted to complex movements characterised by high cognitive demand. Additionally, we identified task-induced connectivity changes in both groups of subjects towards pre- and caudal supplementary motor areas, which were linked to either faster or more complex task conditions. Interestingly, coupling of dorsal premotor cortex and supplementary motor area was more negative in controls compared to gene mutation carriers. Furthermore, changes in the connectivity pattern of gene carriers allowed prediction of the years to estimated disease onset in individuals.Our study characterises the connectivity pattern of core cortical regions maintaining motor function in relation to varying task demand. We identified connections of bilateral dorsal premotor cortex as critical for compensation as well as task-dependent recruitment of pre- and caudal supplementary motor area. The latter finding nicely mirrors a previously published general linear model-based analysis of the same data. Such knowledge about disease specific inter-regional effective connectivity may help identify foci for interventions based on transcranial magnetic stimulation designed to stimulate functioning and also to predict their impact on other regions in motor-associated networks.

Highlights

  • Cognitive reserve (CR; Katzman, 1993; Stern, 2002; for a review see Valenzuela, 2008) is a concept to explain relatively preserved cognition in the face of neurodegeneration (Bartrés-Faz and Arenaza-Urquijo, 2011; Murray et al, 2011; Steffener et al, 2011)

  • Inspections of variance explained by the models and parameter estimability in three preclinical Huntington's disease (preHD) patients led to their exclusion leaving 12 preHD patients and healthy controls (HC) for further Dynamic Causal Model (DCM) analyses

  • The conditionindependent connection from pre-supplementary motor area (pSMA) to left superior parietal cortex (lSPC) (p = 0.02) was stronger and more negative in HC compared to preHD and so were the effects of ‘complexity’ from caudal supplementary motor area (cSMA) to pSMA (p = 0.03) and from left dorsal premotor cortex (lPMd) to pSMA (p = 0.03)

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Summary

Introduction

Cognitive reserve (CR; Katzman, 1993; Stern, 2002; for a review see Valenzuela, 2008) is a concept to explain relatively preserved cognition in the face of neurodegeneration (Bartrés-Faz and Arenaza-Urquijo, 2011; Murray et al, 2011; Steffener et al, 2011). The assessment of compensatory mechanisms should preferably be undertaken in pre- or early clinical stages when therapeutic interventions are most likely to be effective As such preclinical stages cannot be identified in the majority of neurodegenerative disorders, we chose to investigate Huntington's disease (HD), where preclinical stages can be identified with certainty and graded according to estimated proximity to symptom onset. Simple correlations of the measured BOLD signal are insufficient to detect causalities (Stephan, 2004) This type of inference requires modelling of changing neuronal activity in different contexts from the recorded effects on the BOLD signal. Assumptions about the condition-independent connections between the nodes, which are not related to the task at hand, are specified. A negative value is interpreted as decreased, a positive value as increased coupling from one region to another

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