scholarly journals T164. NETWORK CONNECTIVITY SUPPORTING REWARD LEARNING DIFFERENTIALLY DISRUPTED IN TREATMENT RESISTANT SCHIZOPHRENIA

2020 ◽  
Vol 46 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S293-S294
Author(s):  
Charlotte Horne ◽  
Lucy Vanes ◽  
Timea Szentgyorgyi ◽  
Tess Verneuil ◽  
Elias Mouchlianitis ◽  
...  

Abstract Background It is estimated that one third of patients with schizophrenia fail to adequately respond to antipsychotic medication, termed ‘treatment-resistance’. This occurs despite adequate blockade of D2 receptors in the brain. The parsimonious options are that treatment resistance could arise through a failure of cognitive control over the dopaminergic dysfunction in the striatum; or has a different primary non-dopaminergic mechanism that isn’t targeted by current antipsychotics. Contemporary models suggest that schizophrenia is associated with reduced reward prediction errors (RPE) and consequent aberrant salience driven by increased dopamine levels that ‘drown out’ phasic signals. This causes positive symptoms and impaired reward learning. However, RPE signalling in treatment-resistant patients appears intact despite sub-optimal behavioural performance. It is therefore unclear how reward learning is impaired in these patients. Methods We investigated how reward learning is disrupted at the network level in 21 medicated treatment-responsive and 20 medicated treatment-resistant patients with schizophrenia compared with 24 healthy controls (HC). Participants learnt to associate one of two emotional faces with a reward during a reinforcement learning task in an MRI scanner. Functional MRI BOLD signal was extracted from four brain regions (fusiform cortex, amygdala, caudate and anterior cingulate cortex (ACC)) activated in response to face cues and RPEs. These formed a network of interacting brain regions supporting reward learning. Dynamic Causal Modelling assessed how effective connectivity between regions in this cortico-striatal-limbic network is disrupted in each patient group compared to HC. Connectivity was also examined with respect to symptoms and salience. Finally, cognitive control and the role of glutamate were assessed by relating top-down connectivity from the ACC with glutamate levels measured from the same region of the ACC. Results In responsive patients, there was enhanced top-down connectivity from the ACC to sensory regions (fusiform and amygdala) and reduced input to the caudate compared to HC. Increased top-down connectivity was inversely correlated with symptom severity and sensory-salience. This suggests the presence of an effective compensatory mechanism for unreliable sensory information in responsive patients. Resistant patients however showed normal network connectivity compared to HC except abnormal connectivity within the ACC. This supports an alternative, non-dopaminergic mechanism disrupting reward learning in this refractory group. Increasing connectivity from ACC to caudate was related to positive symptom severity and salience in this group. Moreover, ACC glutamate levels were related to key top-down connections in HC and responsive patients but were not related to any connections in resistant patients. This suggests that glutamate may not be modulating connectivity effectively in this network to exert cognitive control and update reward predictions. Discussion In summary, differential mechanisms underlie disrupted reward learning between responsive and resistant groups. Resistant patients show similar RPE signalling and network connectivity to HC suggesting their dopaminergic functioning is intact. Impaired glutamate function may present a key mechanism that disrupts reward learning – and why dopaminergic drugs are ineffective. This finding is important for developing new drugs (e.g. glutamatergic targets) and guiding treatment strategies (e.g. giving clozapine earlier) in resistant patients. Future research probing cognitive control mechanisms and glutamate function will be useful to elucidate this putative pathology in treatment resistance.

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kai Hwang ◽  
James M. Shine ◽  
Mark D’Esposito

AbstractFlexible interaction between brain regions enables neural systems to transfer and process information adaptively for goal-directed behaviors. In the current study, we investigated neural substrates that interact with task-evoked functional connectivity during cognitive control. We conducted a human fMRI study where participants selectively attended to a category of visual stimuli in the presence of competing distractors from another stimulus category. To study flexible interactions between brain regions, we performed a dynamic functional connectivity analysis to estimate temporal changes in connectivity strength between brain regions under different levels of cognitive control. Consistent with theoretical predictions, we found that cognitive control selectively enhances functional connectivity for prioritizing the processing of task-relevant information. By regressing temporal changes in connectivity strength against activity patterns elsewhere in the brain, we localized frontal and parietal regions that potentially provide top-down biasing signals for influencing, or reading information out from, task-evoked functional connectivity. Our results suggest that in addition to modulating local activity, fronto-parietal regions could also exert top-down biasing signals to influence functional connectivity between distributed brain regions.


2006 ◽  
Vol 20 (4) ◽  
pp. 286-296 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Fassbender ◽  
C. Simoes-Franklin ◽  
K. Murphy ◽  
R. Hester ◽  
J. Meaney ◽  
...  

Seemingly distinct cognitive tasks often activate similar anatomical networks. For example, the right fronto-parietal cortex is active across a wide variety of paradigms suggesting that these regions may subserve a general cognitive function. We utilized fMRI and a GO/NOGO task consisting of two conditions, one with intermittent unpredictive “cues-to-attend” and the other without any “cues-to-attend,” in order to investigate areas involved in inhibition of a prepotent response and top-down attentional control. Sixteen subjects (5 male, ages ranging from 20 to 30 years) responded to an alternating sequence of the letters X and Y and withheld responding when the alternating sequence was broken (e.g., when X followed an X). Cues were rare stimulus font-color changes, which were linked to a simple instruction to attend to the task at hand. We hypothesized that inhibitions and cues, despite requiring quite different responses from subjects, might engage similar top-down attentional control processes and would thus share a common network of anatomical substrates. Although inhibitions and cues activated a number of distinct brain regions, a similar network of right dorsolateral prefrontal and inferior parietal regions was active for both. These results suggest that this network, commonly activated for response inhibition, may subserve a more general cognitive control process involved in allocating top-down attentional resources.


2021 ◽  
pp. 102631
Author(s):  
Charlotte M. Horne ◽  
Lucy D. Vanes ◽  
Tess Verneuil ◽  
Elias Mouchlianitis ◽  
Timea Szentgyorgyi ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
David M. Lydon-Staley ◽  
Christine Kuehner ◽  
Vera Zamoscik ◽  
Silke Huffziger ◽  
Peter Kirsch ◽  
...  

Rumination, the perseverative thinking about one’s problems and emotions, is a maladaptive response to sadness and a risk factor for the development and course of depression. A critical challenge hampering attempts to promote more adaptive responses to sadness is that the between-person characteristics associated with the tendency to ruminate following depressed mood remain uncharacterized. We examine the importance of between-person differences in blood-oxygen-level dependent (BOLD) functional networks underlying cognitive control for the moment-to-moment association between sadness and rumination in daily life. We pair functional magnetic resonance imaging with ambulatory assessments measuring momentary sadness and rumination deployed 10 times per day over 4 consecutive days from 58 participants (40 female, mean age = 36.69 years; 29 remitted from a lifetime episode of Major Depression). Using a multilevel model, we show that rumination increases following increases in sadness for participants with higher than average between-network connectivity of the default mode network and the fronto-parietal network. We also show that rumination increases following increases in sadness for participants with lower than average between-network connectivity of the fronto- parietal network and the salience network. In addition, we find that the flexibility of the salience network’s pattern of connections with brain regions across time is protective against increases in rumination following sadness. Our findings highlight the importance of the neural correlates of cognitive control for understanding maladaptive responses to sadness and also support the value of large-scale functional connectivity networks for understanding cognitive-affective behaviors as they naturally occur during the course of daily life.


2021 ◽  
Vol 295 ◽  
pp. 113607
Author(s):  
Megan Thomas ◽  
Timea Szentgyorgyi ◽  
Lucy D. Vanes ◽  
Elias Mouchlianitis ◽  
Erica F. Barry ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tun-Wei Hsu ◽  
Jong-Ling Fuh ◽  
Da-Wei Wang ◽  
Li-Fen Chen ◽  
Chia-Jung Chang ◽  
...  

AbstractDementia is related to the cellular accumulation of β-amyloid plaques, tau aggregates, or α-synuclein aggregates, or to neurotransmitter deficiencies in the dopaminergic and cholinergic pathways. Cellular and neurochemical changes are both involved in dementia pathology. However, the role of dopaminergic and cholinergic networks in metabolic connectivity at different stages of dementia remains unclear. The altered network organisation of the human brain characteristic of many neuropsychiatric and neurodegenerative disorders can be detected using persistent homology network (PHN) analysis and algebraic topology. We used 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (18F-FDG PET) imaging data to construct dopaminergic and cholinergic metabolism networks, and used PHN analysis to track the evolution of these networks in patients with different stages of dementia. The sums of the network distances revealed significant differences between the network connectivity evident in the Alzheimer’s disease and mild cognitive impairment cohorts. A larger distance between brain regions can indicate poorer efficiency in the integration of information. PHN analysis revealed the structural properties of and changes in the dopaminergic and cholinergic metabolism networks in patients with different stages of dementia at a range of thresholds. This method was thus able to identify dysregulation of dopaminergic and cholinergic networks in the pathology of dementia.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Florian Bitsch ◽  
Philipp Berger ◽  
Andreas Fink ◽  
Arne Nagels ◽  
Benjamin Straube ◽  
...  

AbstractThe ability to generate humor gives rise to positive emotions and thus facilitate the successful resolution of adversity. Although there is consensus that inhibitory processes might be related to broaden the way of thinking, the neural underpinnings of these mechanisms are largely unknown. Here, we use functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging, a humorous alternative uses task and a stroop task, to investigate the brain mechanisms underlying the emergence of humorous ideas in 24 subjects. Neuroimaging results indicate that greater cognitive control abilities are associated with increased activation in the amygdala, the hippocampus and the superior and medial frontal gyrus during the generation of humorous ideas. Examining the neural mechanisms more closely shows that the hypoactivation of frontal brain regions is associated with an hyperactivation in the amygdala and vice versa. This antagonistic connectivity is concurrently linked with an increased number of humorous ideas and enhanced amygdala responses during the task. Our data therefore suggests that a neural antagonism previously related to the emergence and regulation of negative affective responses, is linked with the generation of emotionally positive ideas and may represent an important neural pathway supporting mental health.


Cancers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 692
Author(s):  
Roosa Kaarijärvi ◽  
Heidi Kaljunen ◽  
Kirsi Ketola

Neuroendocrine plasticity and treatment-induced neuroendocrine phenotypes have recently been proposed as important resistance mechanisms underlying prostate cancer progression. Treatment-induced neuroendocrine prostate cancer (t-NEPC) is highly aggressive subtype of castration-resistant prostate cancer which develops for one fifth of patients under prolonged androgen deprivation. In recent years, understanding of molecular features and phenotypic changes in neuroendocrine plasticity has been grown. However, there are still fundamental questions to be answered in this emerging research field, for example, why and how do the prostate cancer treatment-resistant cells acquire neuron-like phenotype. The advantages of the phenotypic change and the role of tumor microenvironment in controlling cellular plasticity and in the emergence of treatment-resistant aggressive forms of prostate cancer is mostly unknown. Here, we discuss the molecular and functional links between neurodevelopmental processes and treatment-induced neuroendocrine plasticity in prostate cancer progression and treatment resistance. We provide an overview of the emergence of neurite-like cells in neuroendocrine prostate cancer cells and whether the reported t-NEPC pathways and proteins relate to neurodevelopmental processes like neurogenesis and axonogenesis during the development of treatment resistance. We also discuss emerging novel therapeutic targets modulating neuroendocrine plasticity.


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