| Literature DB >> 24994972 |
Silke Lissek1, Guido S Vallana1, Lara Schlaffke1, Melanie Lenz1, Hubert R Dinse2, Martin Tegenthoff1.
Abstract
The dopaminergic system is involved in learning and participates in the modulation of cortical excitability (CE). CE has been suggested as a marker of learning and use-dependent plasticity. However, results from separate studies on either motor CE or motor learning challenge this notion, suggesting opposing effects of dopaminergic modulation upon these parameters: while agonists decrease and antagonists increase CE, motor learning is enhanced by agonists and disturbed by antagonists. To examine whether this discrepancy persists when complex motor learning and motor CE are measured in the same experimental setup, we investigated the effects of dopaminergic (DA) antagonism upon both parameters and upon task-associated brain activation. Our results demonstrate that DA-antagonism has opposing effects upon motor CE and motor sequence learning. Tiapride did not alter baseline CE, but increased CE post training of a complex motor sequence while simultaneously impairing motor learning. Moreover, tiapride reduced activation in several brain regions associated with motor sequence performance, i.e., dorsolateral PFC (dlPFC), supplementary motor area (SMA), Broca's area, cingulate and caudate body. Blood-oxygenation-level-dependent (BOLD) intensity in anterior cingulate and caudate body, but not CE, correlated with performance across groups. In summary, our results do not support a concept of CE as a general marker of motor learning, since they demonstrate that a straightforward relation of increased CE and higher learning success does not apply to all instances of motor learning. At least for complex motor tasks that recruit a network of brain regions outside motor cortex, CE in primary motor cortex is probably no central determinant for learning success.Entities:
Keywords: TMS; cortical excitability; dopamine; fMRI; motor learning
Year: 2014 PMID: 24994972 PMCID: PMC4063238 DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2014.00201
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Behav Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5153 Impact factor: 3.558
Figure 1Motor sequence task. Participants learned a motor sequence consisting of a series of key presses on two keyboards with each four keys for the left and right hand. Each digit corresponded to a key on the keyboard and thus to a finger, in ascending order from left to right, with 1 corresponding to the left and 8 to the right pinky finger (red digits: left hand, black digits: right hand). The motor sequence consisted of 64 key presses in total, subdivided into four sections with 16 key presses each. In total there were nine different 4 key sequences.
Figure 2Cortical excitability in the tiapride and placebo groups before and after learning and training of the motor sequence task. Mean CE is expressed as the ratio of MEP amplitudes in response to (A) facilitatory double pulse/single pulse stimulation and (B) inhibitory double pulse/single pulse stimulation pre and post training.
Cortical excitability baseline, pre and post training in tiapride, and control participants.
| Facilitatory CE baseline | 1.5113 (±0.0972) | 1.7924 (±0.1179) |
| Facilitatory CE pre | 1.5685 (±0.1098) | 1.7709 (±0.1760) |
| Facilitatory CE post | 1.8569 (±0.1801) | 1.9350 (±0.2018) |
| Inhibitory CE baseline | 0.3522 (±0.0486) | 0.5037 (±0.1131) |
| Inhibitory CE pre | 0.3953 (±0.0375) | 0.4374 (±0.0714) |
| Inhibitory CE post | 0.5320 (±0.0638) | 0.4689 (±0.1034) |
Figure 3Performance in the motor sequence task. (A) Percent correct keypresses in reproduction of the learned motor sequence. (B) Total Entropy H produced by the groups during improvisation over the motor sequence. Higher values indicate a higher level of improvisation. (C) Scatterplot of the relation between reproduction (x) and improvisation (y) performance in the placebo (diamond) and tiapride (triangle) group. The dashed line rectangle frames the data points of those six placebo and two tiapride participants with both good reproduction and good improvisation (>50%).
Correlation between motor task performance and cortical excitability (Pearson's correlation coefficient).
| Facilitatory CE pre training | −0.226 | 0.419 | 0.386 | 0.368 | 0.135 | 0.479 |
| Facilitatory CE post training | 0.012 | 0.965 | 0.454 | 0.089 | 0.214 | 0.257 |
| Facilitatory CE pre + post tr. | −0.082 | 0.772 | 0.460 | 0.084 | 0.196 | 0.300 |
| Inhibitory CE pre training | −0.091 | 0.746 | 0.278 | 0.316 | 0.081 | 0.669 |
| Inhibitory CE post training | 0.194 | 0.489 | 0.159 | 0.132 | 0.109 | 0.566 |
| Inhibitory CE pre + post | 0.192 | 0.493 | 0.158 | 0.573 | 0.104 | 0.583 |
Figure 4Higher activation in motor cortex (righthemispheric BA 4 and 6) in the tiapride group during task performance compared to tapping (two-sample .
Areas in motor cortex that show higher activation in the tiapride group during task performance and improvisation (two-sample .
| Middle frontal gyrus | 6 | R | 42, 10, 58 | 5.11 | 68 |
| Precentral gyrus | 4 | R | 40, −20, 50 | 4.31 | 178 |
Activation in improvisation and reproduction of the motor sequence task in the placebo and tiapride groups (one sample .
| Precentral gyrus | 4 | R | 14, −24, 52 | 5.10 | 82 | |||||||||
| Medial frontal gyrus | 6 | R | 12, −30, 56 | 5.88 | 82 | |||||||||
| 8 | R | 0, 42, 44 | 5.04 | 44 | 10, 16, 52 | 4.47 | 33 | |||||||
| 9 | R | 4, 52, 40 | 5.40 | 1338 | 0, 40, 36 | 5.60 | 44 | |||||||
| 10 | L | −6, 54, 10 | 4.33 | 93 | −4, 60, 18 | 5.56 | 22 | |||||||
| R | 2, 54, −4 | 3.76 | 49 | |||||||||||
| Inferior frontal gyrus | 9 | L | −52, 4, 30 | 5.63 | 552 | |||||||||
| 47 | L | −46, 34, −12 | 9.07 | 86 | −28, 26, −18 | 7.98 | 557 | |||||||
| −48, 22, −8 | 7.60 | 557 | ||||||||||||
| −24, 14, −22 | 6.33 | 57 | ||||||||||||
| R | 60, 18, −4 | 5.39 | 44 | 52, 36, −10 | 7.05 | 325 | ||||||||
| 38, 32, −20 | 6.13 | 325 | ||||||||||||
| 45 | R | 64, 16, 6 | 5.43 | 13 | ||||||||||
| Middle frontal gyrus | 6 | R | 26, 2, 48 | 4.20 | 12 | |||||||||
| 47 | L | −48, 35, 0 | 4.85 | 747 | ||||||||||
| R | 48, 40, −4 | 3.94 | 298 | |||||||||||
| 11 | L | −34, 35, −14 | 4.42 | 747 | −44, 44, −16 | 6.16 | 91 | |||||||
| R | 28, 40, −6 | 4.93 | 22 | |||||||||||
| 20, 40, −16 | 3.92 | 16 | ||||||||||||
| Superior frontal gyrus | 6 | L | −15, 28, 58 | 4.42 | 25 | −10, 18, 60 | 5.20 | 79 | −14, −4, 70 | 4.87 | 16 | |||
| R | 14, 30, 58 | 4.34 | 134 | |||||||||||
| 8 | L | −24, 28, 56 | 5.26 | 1338 | −22, 38, 48 | 6.88 | 24 | |||||||
| −38, 18, 56 | 5.18 | 16 | ||||||||||||
| R | 4, 30, 48 | 7.06 | 134 | |||||||||||
| 14, 34, 50 | 5.15 | 134 | ||||||||||||
| 9 | L | −14, 50, 36 | 5.23 | 1338 | ||||||||||
| 10 | L | −16, 60, 18 | 4.58 | 69 | ||||||||||
| −16, 54, 26 | 4.73 | 15 | ||||||||||||
| R | 24, 58, 6 | 4.00 | 48 | 20, 66, 12 | 5.05 | 12 | ||||||||
| Anterior cingulate | 32 | L | −2, 50, 2 | 5.63 | 24 | −12, 32, −10 | 4.69 | 22 | ||||||
| R | 4, 34, 20 | 4.29 | 17 | 22, 40, 16 | 5.26 | 19 | ||||||||
| 5, 38, 15 | 4.51 | 16 | ||||||||||||
| 24 | L | −4, 30, 20 | 5.61 | 17 | ||||||||||
| 0, 16, 24 | 4.91 | 14 | ||||||||||||
| Cingulate gyrus | 32 | L | −16, 24, 28 | 6.73 | 81 | −20, 8, 42 | 4.03 | 17 | ||||||
| 24 | R | 10, 4, 48 | 4.37 | 33 | ||||||||||
| L | −20, −18, 46 | 4.15 | 52 | |||||||||||
| 31 | R | 22, −50, 28 | 4.39 | 45 | ||||||||||
| Middle temporal gyrus | 21 | L | −64, −54, −2 | 6.52 | 797 | |||||||||
| R | 64, −58, 0 | 5.41 | 689 | |||||||||||
| 62, −2, −28 | 5.01 | 109 | ||||||||||||
| 38 | L | −38, 4, −40 | 3.93 | 43 | ||||||||||
| Superior temporal gyrus | 22 | L | −65, −55, 10 | 5.88 | 797 | −60, −52, 10 | 5.25 | 53 | ||||||
| 38 | L | −25, 14, −30 | 4.55 | 57 | ||||||||||
| Inferior temporal gyrus | 37 | R | 56, −46, −22 | 4.56 | 689 | |||||||||
| Insula | 13 | L | −30, −38, 14 | 4.74 | 101 | |||||||||
| Precuneus | 7 | R | 20, −55, 30 | 8.11 | 1216 | |||||||||
| 7 | L | −14, −58, 52 | 7.09 | 844 | ||||||||||
| −12, −66, 30 | 5.44 | 75 | ||||||||||||
| −22, −68, 30 | 4.12 | 13 | ||||||||||||
| 31 | L | −20, −52, 38 | 3.79 | 30 | ||||||||||
| Superior parietal lobule | 7 | R | 26, −66, 58 | 9.35 | 1216 | |||||||||
| L | −24, −66, 48 | 7.47 | 844 | |||||||||||
| Postcentral gyrus | 3 | L | −40, −36, 52 | 5.35 | 201 | |||||||||
| Inferior parietal lobule | 40 | R | 68, −46, 24 | 5.09 | 689 | 42, −40, 56 | 4.83 | 19 | ||||||
| L | −66, −30, 28 | 9.88 | 797 | |||||||||||
| −52, −35, 40 | 4.55 | 27 | ||||||||||||
| Body | L | −20, −24, 22 | 9.00 | 111 | −4, 14, 10 | 5.19 | 13 | |||||||
| R | 14, −18, 30 | 4.02 | 62 | |||||||||||
| Tail | R | 24, −32, 16 | 6.01 | 10 | 34, −46, 8 | 4.23 | 104 | |||||||
| 32, −30, −2 | 3.81 | 12 | ||||||||||||
| Posterior lobe, tonsil | R | 28, −52, −40 | 10.6 | 1267 | ||||||||||
| Posterior lobe, tuber | R | 34, −70, −35 | 7.44 | 1267 | ||||||||||
| Posterior lobe, pyramis | R | 14, −64, −38 | 6.65 | 1267 | ||||||||||
| Anterior lobe | R | 24, −56, −38 | 6.74 | 18 | ||||||||||
Reduced activation in the tiapride group compared to the placebo group (two-sample .
| Superior frontal gyrus | 8 | R | 6, 18, 56 | 4.89 | 208 | |||
| 6 | L | −10, 8, 54 | 3.74 | 17 | ||||
| Medial frontal gyrus | 8 | R | 8, 25, 56 | 4.34 | 208 | |||
| Inferior frontal gyrus | 9 | L | −50, 4, 32 | 4.74 | 125 | |||
| R | 58, 12, 28 | 4.39 | 42 | |||||
| 42, 4, 28 | 3.85 | 13 | ||||||
| Superior frontal gyrus | 6 | L | −14, −8, 72 | 3.94 | 42 | |||
| Medial frontal gyrus | 8 | R | 2, 30, 48 | 3.85 | 11 | |||
| 6 | R | 4, 28, 38 | 4.10 | 17 | ||||
| Precentral gyrus (Broca's area) | 44 | L | −50, 10, 12 | 3.77 | 13 | |||
| Anterior cingulate | 33 | L | −2, 16, 22 | 5.82 | 119 | |||
| Cingulate gyrus | 32 | L | −2, 18, 36 | 3.77 | 119 | |||
| 24 | R | 4, 0, 36 | 4.33 | 61 | ||||
| L | −2, 2, 44 | 3.75 | 61 | |||||
| Caudate body | R | 14, −2, 16 | 4.97 | 50 | ||||
| L | −14, −2, 14 | 3.97 | 18 | |||||
| Caudate tail | R | 26, −44, 16 | 3.15 | 31 | ||||
| L | −34, −42, 0 | 3.00 | 19 | |||||
Figure 5Areas of reduced activation in the tiapride group, compared to the placebo group, in reproduction of the learned motor sequence (two-sample .