Literature DB >> 15520373

Age-related reduction in microcolumnar structure in area 46 of the rhesus monkey correlates with behavioral decline.

Luis Cruz1, Daniel L Roe, Brigita Urbanc, Howard Cabral, H E Stanley, Douglas L Rosene.   

Abstract

Many age-related declines in cognitive function are attributed to the prefrontal cortex, area 46 being especially critical. Yet in normal aging, studies indicate that neurons are not lost in area 46, suggesting that impairments result from more subtle processes. One cortical feature that is functionally important, but that has not been examined in normal aging because of a lack of efficient quantitative methods, is the vertical arrangement of neurons into microcolumns, a fundamental computational unit of the cortex. By using a density-map method derived from condensed-matter physics, we quantified microcolumns in area 46 of seven young and seven aged rhesus monkeys that had been cognitively tested. This analysis demonstrated that there is no age-related reduction in total neuronal density or in microcolumn width, length, or periodicity. There was, however, a statistically significant decrease in the strength of microcolumns, indicating microcolumnar disorganization. This reduction in strength was significantly correlated with age-related cognitive decline on tests of spatial working memory and recognition memory independent of the effect of age. Modeling demonstrated that random neuron displacements of approximately 30% of a neuronal diameter (<3 mum) produced the observed reduction in strength. Hence, it is possible that, with changes in dendrites and myelinated axons, subtle displacements of neurons occur that alter microcolumnar structure and correlate with age-induced dysfunction. Therefore, quantitative measurement of microcolumnar structure may provide a sensitive morphological method to assay microcolumnar function in aging and other conditions.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15520373      PMCID: PMC528765          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0407002101

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  35 in total

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Review 3.  Microcolumns in the cerebral cortex.

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Authors:  D P Buxhoeveden; A E Switala; M Litaker; E Roy; M F Casanova
Journal:  Brain Behav Evol       Date:  2001-06       Impact factor: 1.808

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Authors:  D P Buxhoeveden; A E Switala; E Roy; M Litaker; M F Casanova
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7.  Dissociable roles of mid-dorsolateral prefrontal and anterior inferotemporal cortex in visual working memory.

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10.  Description of microcolumnar ensembles in association cortex and their disruption in Alzheimer and Lewy body dementias.

Authors:  S V Buldyrev; L Cruz; T Gomez-Isla; E Gomez-Tortosa; S Havlin; R Le; H E Stanley; B Urbanc; B T Hyman
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2000-05-09       Impact factor: 11.205

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  16 in total

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3.  Generating a model of the three-dimensional spatial distribution of neurons using density maps.

Authors:  Luis Cruz; Brigita Urbanc; Andrew Inglis; Douglas L Rosene; H E Stanley
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4.  A computational model for the loss of neuronal organization in microcolumns.

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Review 5.  Effects of normal aging on prefrontal area 46 in the rhesus monkey.

Authors:  Jennifer Luebke; Helen Barbas; Alan Peters
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6.  Automated identification of neurons and their locations.

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Review 7.  Neuronal and morphological bases of cognitive decline in aged rhesus monkeys.

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Review 8.  A review of the structural alterations in the cerebral hemispheres of the aging rhesus monkey.

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9.  Age-related reduction in microcolumnar structure correlates with cognitive decline in ventral but not dorsal area 46 of the rhesus monkey.

Authors:  L Cruz; D L Roe; B Urbanc; A Inglis; H E Stanley; D L Rosene
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Review 10.  Prefrontal cortical minicolumn: from executive control to disrupted cognitive processing.

Authors:  Ioan Opris; Manuel F Casanova
Journal:  Brain       Date:  2014-02-14       Impact factor: 13.501

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