| Literature DB >> 29196686 |
Qiang Li1,2, Gang Li3,4, Dan Wu1, Hanbing Lu5, Zhipeng Hou1, Christopher A Ross3,6,7, Yihong Yang5, Jiangyang Zhang8,9, Wenzhen Duan10,11,12.
Abstract
Huntington's disease (HD) is an autosomal dominant inherited neurodegenerative disorder, and no cure is available currently. Treatment of HD is likely to be most beneficial in the early, possibly pre-manifestation stage. The challenge is to determine the best time for intervention and evaluate putative efficacy in the absence of clinical symptoms. Resting-state functional MRI may represent a promising tool to develop biomarker reflecting early neuronal dysfunction in HD brain, because it can examine multiple brain networks without confounding effects of cognitive ability, which makes the resting-state fMRI promising as a translational bridge between preclinical study in animal models and clinical findings in HD patients. In this study, we examined brain regional connectivity and its correlation to brain atrophy, as well as motor function in the 18-week-old N171-82Q HD mice. HD mice exhibited significantly altered functional connectivity in multiple networks. Particularly, the weaker intra-striatum connectivity was positively correlated with striatal atrophy, while striatum-retrosplenial cortex connectivity is negatively correlated with striatal atrophy. The resting-state brain regional connectivity had no significant correlation with motor deficits in HD mice. Our results suggest that altered brain connectivity detected by resting-state fMRI might serve as an early disease biomarker in HD.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29196686 PMCID: PMC5711837 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-17026-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1The key networks identified by rs-fMRI are detected in both control and HD mice include the primary motor cortex M1 network, secondary motor cortex M2/ cingulate cortex network, striatum network, somatosensory network, retrosplenial cortex network and thalamus network. Z Score from 0 to 8 as indicted by the color bar. The red arrows indicate the seed locations for the subsequent seed-based analysis.
Figure 2Significantly altered functional connectivity maps in N171–82Q HD mice versus their littermate controls. The seed locations in different brain regions were indicated in each panel. the blue color covered regions in the HD vs WT panels indicate the brain regions which have reduced connectivity with indicated seed regions in each panel, and orange covered regions indicate the regions which have enhanced connectivity with the seed regions. n = 7 (control group) and 13 (HD group), the value is HD/control. t values were indicated by the color bars (bottom of the graph), the range is from −25 to 25 in WT or HD panels, and from −7 to 7 in HD versus HD panels. p < 0.005, corrected with Monte Carlo simulation program.
Figure 3Correlation analysis between striatal volumes and resting-state brain regional functional connectivity in the N171–82Q HD (n = 13 mice) and their littermate control mice (n = 7 mice). (A–D) Striatal atrophy and altered resting-state functional connectivity was detected in HD mice compared those in age-match control mice. p < 0.05 compared to the value in the control group by standard Student’s t-test. (E) Positive correlation between striatal volume and bilateral striatum connectivity in all mice, n = 20. (F) Positive correlation between striatal volume and intra-striatal resting-state functional connectivity in all mice, n = 20. (G) Negative correlation between striatum volume and connectivity between striatum and retrosplenial cortex (RC) in all mice, n = 20. (H) Correlation between striatal volume and striatum-RC connectivity in HD mice only. n = 13. The correlation was analyzed by Pearsonian correlation modeling.
Figure 4Correlation analysis between motor function and resting-state functional connectivity in the N171–82Q HD (n = 13) and their litter mate control (n = 7) mice. n = 20. (A) Motor deficits were evidenced in HD mice indicated by prolonged traverse time on the beam. p < 0.05 compared to the value in the control group by standard Student’s t-test. (B–D) Correlation between motor dysfunction and altered resting-state functional connectivity between brain regions indicated in the graphs was analyzed by Pearson correlation modeling. Retrosplenial cortex (RC), left striatum (L-str).