Abstract

Decline in semantic cognition in early stages of Parkinson’s disease (PD) is a leading risk factor for future dementia, yet the underlying neural mechanisms are not understood. The present study addressed this gap by investigating the functional connectivity of regions involved in semantic recollection. We further examined whether microtubule-associated protein tau (MAPT) risk variants, which may accelerate cognitive decline, altered the strength of regional functional connections. Cognitively normal PD and healthy elder controls underwent fMRI while performing a fame-discrimination task, which activates the semantic network. Analyses focused on disturbances in fame-modulated functional connectivity in PD for regions that govern semantic recollection and interrelated processes. Group differences were found in multiple connectivity features, which were reduced into principal components that reflected the strength of fame-modulated regional couplings with other brain areas. Despite the absence of group differences in semantic cognition, two aberrant connectivity patterns were uncovered in PD. One pattern was related to a loss in frontal, parietal, and temporal connection topologies that governed semantic recollection in older controls. Another pattern was characterized by functional reconfiguration, wherein frontal, parietal, temporal and caudate couplings were strengthened with areas that were not recruited by controls. Correlations between principal component scores and cognitive measures suggested that reconfigured frontal coupling topologies in PD supported compensatory routes for accessing semantic content, whereas reconfigured parietal, temporal, and caudate connection topologies were detrimental or unrelated to cognition. Increased tau transcription diminished recruitment of compensatory frontal topologies but amplified recruitment of parietal topologies that were unfavorable for cognition. Collectively, the findings provide a new understanding of early vulnerabilities in the functional architecture of regional connectivity during semantic recollection in cognitively normal PD. The findings also have implications for tracking cognitive progression and selecting patients who stand to benefit from therapeutic interventions.

Highlights

  • In early stages of Parkinson’s disease (PD) cognitive decline is prominent in attention and executive functions, but memory, visuospatial cognition, and semantic cognition can be affected (Muslimovic et al, 2005)

  • The results provide a new understanding of early vulnerabilities in the functional architecture of regional connectivity in PD during semantic recollection

  • Abnormal connectivity patterns were partly related to a loss in frontal, parietal, and temporal connection topologies that govern semantic cognition and interrelated processes in healthy elders

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Summary

Introduction

In early stages of Parkinson’s disease (PD) cognitive decline is prominent in attention and executive functions, but memory, visuospatial cognition, and semantic cognition can be affected (Muslimovic et al, 2005). Semantic knowledge is formed through experience-related inputs from sensorimotor, visual, and conceptual systems (Ralph et al, 2017). These systems communicate with the anterior temporal lobe, which integrates multimodal features that shape semantic representations. Other models propose that there are many semantic hubs (Binder and Desai, 2011) as posterior temporoparietal convergence zones (e.g., angular gyrus) shape semantic memory via integration of inputs from diverse networks (Bonner et al, 2013; Fairhall and Caramazza, 2013; Price et al, 2015; Binder et al, 2016). The process of remembering is multifaceted, involving partial reactivation of temporoparietal semantic networks (Danker and Anderson, 2010; Garcia et al, 2020), and recruitment of frontal regions that supervise accesses to semantic knowledge (Binder and Desai, 2011; Chiou et al, 2018) as well as memory (parahippocampus, hippocampus) and retrieval systems (e.g., SMA, precuneus, posterior cingulate) (Cavanna and Trimble, 2006; Ranganath and Ritchey, 2012; Danker et al, 2017)

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