Abstract

The complexity of basal ganglia (BG) interactions is often condensed into simple models mainly based on animal data and that present BG in closed-loop cortico-subcortical circuits of excitatory/inhibitory pathways which analyze the incoming cortical data and return the processed information to the cortex. This study was aimed at identifying functional relationships in the BG motor-loop of 24 healthy-subjects who provided written, informed consent and whose BOLD-activity was recorded by MRI methods. The analysis of the functional interaction between these centers by correlation techniques and multiple linear regression showed non-linear relationships which cannot be suitably addressed with these methods. The multiple correspondence analysis (MCA), an unsupervised multivariable procedure which can identify non-linear interactions, was used to study the functional connectivity of BG when subjects were at rest. Linear methods showed different functional interactions expected according to current BG models. MCA showed additional functional interactions which were not evident when using lineal methods. Seven functional configurations of BG were identified with MCA, two involving the primary motor and somatosensory cortex, one involving the deepest BG (external-internal globus pallidum, subthalamic nucleus and substantia nigral), one with the input-output BG centers (putamen and motor thalamus), two linking the input-output centers with other BG (external pallidum and subthalamic nucleus), and one linking the external pallidum and the substantia nigral. The results provide evidence that the non-linear MCA and linear methods are complementary and should be best used in conjunction to more fully understand the nature of functional connectivity of brain centers.

Highlights

  • Basal ganglia (BG) are composed of a number of interconnected subcortical centers which receive projections from all cortical areas and return the processed information to its cortical origin

  • Many basal ganglia (BG) operate in different configurations, suggesting that each BG may perform different functions depending on the network involved, and that networks more than centers are the basic unit of BG activity

  • Basic questions about the functional configurations of BG need specific studies. Are these seven functional configurations alternating ways for BG activity or could they act in parallel? Are the functional configurations of BG dependent on the task which is being performed or are all configurations continuously activated in any circumstance? How do the BG configurations change in Parkinson’s disease and other BG disorders? Some of these questions are presently being considered in our laboratory

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Summary

Introduction

Basal ganglia (BG) are composed of a number of interconnected subcortical centers which receive projections from all cortical areas and return the processed information to its cortical origin. The “motor loop” is composed of three main components: the direct pathway (M1-Put-SN/GPi-MTal-M1), the indirect pathway (M1Put-GPe-STN-GPi/SN-MTal-M1), and the hyperdirect pathway (M1-STN-SN/GPi-MTal-M1) (Figure 1A). These feed-forward circuits have been widely used over the last 20 years to explain different movement disorders and to justify the beneficial effects of drugs and surgical therapies in PD (Alexander et al, 1986; Penney and Young, 1986; Albin et al, 1989; Delong, 1990; Obeso et al, 2008a,b). BG interactions may be mediated by “crossing centers” which transfer but do not process information, facilitating the functional interactions of some centers of the closed-loop circuit which do not have direct structural interconnections (Rodriguez-Sabate et al, 2015)

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