| Literature DB >> 23212584 |
K Mueller1, J Sacher, K Arelin, S Holiga, J Kratzsch, A Villringer, M L Schroeter.
Abstract
There is growing evidence that obesity represents a risk for enhanced gray matter (GM) density changes comparable to those demonstrated for mild cognitive impairment in the elderly. However, it is not clear what mechanisms underlie this apparent alteration in brain structure of overweight subjects and to what extent these changes can already occur in the adolescent human brain. In the present volumetric magnetic resonance imaging study, we investigated GM changes and serum levels of neuron-specific enolase (NSE), a marker for neuronal injury, in a set of overweight/obese subjects and controls. We report a negative correlation for overweight and obese subjects between serum NSE and GM density in hippocampal and cerebellar regions. To validate our neuroimaging findings, we complement these data with NSE gene expression information obtained from the Allen Brain atlas. GM density changes were localized in brain areas that mediate cognitive function-the hippocampus associated with memory performance, and the cognitive cerebellum (lateral posterior lobes) associated with executive, spatial and linguistic processing. The data of our present study highlight the importance of extending current research on cognitive function and brain plasticity in the elderly in the context of obesity to young adult subjects and include serum biomarkers to validate imaging findings generally.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23212584 PMCID: PMC3565188 DOI: 10.1038/tp.2012.121
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Psychiatry ISSN: 2158-3188 Impact factor: 6.222
Demographics for subjects included in the MRI-scanning protocol.
| 16 (6 female/10 male) | 27 (15 female/12 male) | ||
| BMI (kg m−2; mean±s.d.; range) | 22.5±2.0 (18.5–24.9) | 33.0±6.4 (25.3–50.7) | |
| age (years; mean±s.d.; range) | 24.8±3.0 (20–34) | 26.4±5.4 (19–41) | NS ( |
| NSE (μg l−1; mean±s.d.; range) | 8.4±1.7 (5.3–11.3) | 9.1±1.4 (6.9–13.6) | NS ( |
Abbreviatons: BMI, body mass index; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; NSE, neuron-specific enolase; NS, not significant.
Figure 1Negative correlation between GM density and serum NSE detected in a set of lean (BMI<25) and overweight and obese (BMI>25) participants, color coded in red/yellow, using a voxel threshold of P<0.005 and a cluster threshold of P<0.05, FDR-corrected. In the group of 27 overweight and obese subjects, we found a significant negative correlation between GM density and serum NSE concentration in the left and right cerebellum (middle row). Such a negative correlation was also detected bilaterally in the medial temporal lobe (see middle row, axial view). For the control group we were not able to show a negative correlation between GM density and NSE levels in the cerebellum (top row). The interaction contrast between both factors of body weight and NSE shows the difference between lean and non-lean subjects with respect to the negative correlation between GM density and NSE (bottom row). In that interaction contrast, both cerebellar clusters remained significant showing the negative correlation between GM density and NSE specific to overweight and obese subjects.
Figure 2Anatomical localization of GM density decrease accompanied with an increase of serum NSE concentration in overweight and obese subjects. Significant negative correlation between GM density and NSE was detected in hippocampal and cerebellar regions using a voxel threshold of P<0.005 and a cluster threshold of P<0.05, FDR-corrected, color coded in red/yellow. Using the SPM Anatomy toolbox, both cerebellar clusters were assigned to Lobule VIIa Crus I (Hem) (top row, color coded in red/yellow, see also Table 2). Both clusters located in the medial temporal lobe were assigned to the left and right entorhinal cortex (bottom row).
Spatial localization of significant clusters showing a negative correlation between GM density and serum NSE concentration for the group of 27 overweight and obese subjects (BMI>25) with a voxel threshold of P<0.005 and a cluster threshold of P<0.05, FDR-corrected
| x | y | z | T | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.017 | −28 | −16 | −36 | L | 5.27 | Hippocampus (EC) | 80 | (50–100) |
| −28 | 3 | −38 | L | 4.19 | Hippocampus (EC) | 40 | (20–60) | |
| −27 | 14 | −45 | L | 3.67 | ||||
| 0.033 | 30 | −16 | −39 | R | 4.49 | |||
| 27 | 4 | −38 | R | 4.28 | Hippocampus (EC) | 90 | (60–100) | |
| 24 | −17 | −28 | R | 4.22 | Hippocampus (EC) | 100 | (80–100) | |
| 0.003 | −32 | −60 | −33 | L | 5.29 | Cerebellum, Lobule VIIa Crus I (Hem) | 75 | (59–86) |
| −52 | −54 | −38 | L | 3.79 | Cerebellum, Lobule VIIa Crus I (Hem) | 94 | (91–100) | |
| −45 | −46 | −44 | L | 3.40 | Cerebellum, Lobule VIIa Crus I (Hem) | 56 | (56–78) | |
| 0.000 | 56 | −63 | −32 | R | 6.01 | Cerebellum, Lobule VIIa Crus I (Hem) | 86 | (61–100) |
| 54 | −60 | −47 | R | 5.99 | Cerebellum, Lobule VIIa Crus I (Hem) | 74 | (73–83) | |
| 36 | −64 | −33 | R | 5.20 | Cerebellum, Lobule VIIa Crus I (Hem) | 100 | (91–100) |
Abbreviations: BMI, body mass index; FDR, false discovery rate; GM, gray matter; Hem, Hemisphere; L, left; MNI, Montreal Neurological Institute; NSE, neuron-specific enolase; P, cluster-level FDR-corrected P-value; R, right; x,y,z, MNI coordinates.
Anatomical localization was obtained using the SPM Anatomy toolbox. Right columns show the probability of finding the assigned anatomical structure with the local cluster maximum. Range shows the range of those probabilities including the surrounding voxels.
Figure 3Interaction between both factors of NSE and BMI in the right cerebellum. Filled circles (red: BMI>25; blue: BMI<25) show fitted GM density representing the interaction between NSE and BMI, while dots show fitted GM density including the error term of the general linear model. Thus, the dots show original GM density values adjusted for the confounds of age and total GM volume. For the spatial localization of the NSE and BMI interaction, see Figure 1, bottom row.
Figure 4Expression of NSE in the human brain. Individually normalized gene expression is shown in Z scores normalized to whole human brain expression. (a) Heat map across the whole human brain and for each of the three subjects beside each other, where green indicates low and red high expression. For the cerebellum cortex (C) and nuclei (N) are separated. Bars represent mean normalized gene expression±s.d. across three male subjects for (b) the whole brain and (c) cerebellar sub-regions. In (a), NSE-1/NSE-2, and in (b), probe 1/probe 2 (white and black bars, respectively) represent data for the two NSE probes analyzed in the Allen Human Brain Atlas (see Materials and methods section). In (c), probes 1 and 2 are pooled. Accordingly, white and black color is only used to contrast adjacent bars here. ***P<0.001, **P<0.01, *P<0.05 one-tailed Student's t-test against 0. Cereb: cerebellum, Form: formation, Ncl: nucleus.