| Literature DB >> 29997174 |
Ella Striem-Amit1, Gilles Vannuscorps2,3,4, Alfonso Caramazza2,5.
Abstract
What forces direct brain organization and its plasticity? When brain regions are deprived of their input, which regions reorganize based on compensation for the disability and experience, and which regions show topographically constrained plasticity? People born without hands activate their primary sensorimotor hand region while moving body parts used to compensate for this disability (e.g., their feet). This was taken to suggest a neural organization based on functions, such as performing manual-like dexterous actions, rather than on body parts, in primary sensorimotor cortex. We tested the selectivity for the compensatory body parts in the primary and association sensorimotor cortex of people born without hands (dysplasic individuals). Despite clear compensatory foot use, the primary sensorimotor hand area in the dysplasic subjects showed preference for adjacent body parts that are not compensatorily used as effectors. This suggests that function-based organization, proposed for congenital blindness and deafness, does not apply to the primary sensorimotor cortex deprivation in dysplasia. These findings stress the roles of neuroanatomical constraints like topographical proximity and connectivity in determining the functional development of primary cortex even in extreme, congenital deprivation. In contrast, increased and selective foot movement preference was found in dysplasics' association cortex in the inferior parietal lobule. This suggests that the typical motor selectivity of this region for manual actions may correspond to high-level action representations that are effector-invariant. These findings reveal limitations to compensatory plasticity and experience in modifying brain organization of early topographical cortex compared with association cortices driven by function-based organization.Entities:
Keywords: brain development; hands; motor cortex; plasticity; somatosensory cortex
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29997174 PMCID: PMC6065047 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1803926115
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205
Fig. 1.Activation for multiple body parts in the sensorimotor hand area in dysplasic subjects (born without hands). (A) The activation for body part movement (contraction of the lips, right shoulder, abdomen, and right foot) in the typically developed control subject group (random effect GLM analysis; P < 0.05 corrected for multiple comparisons) is shown on the left cortical hemisphere, following the standard Penfield homunculus. The sensorimotor hand area, delineated in white, represents the core area activated by right hand movement in all of the control participants (each at P < 0.05 corrected). This area encompasses both primary somatosensory and motor areas and extends beyond them to the postcentral sulcus posteriorly and precentral gyrus anteriorly. CS, central sulcus; IPS, intraparietal sulcus; PoCS, postcentral sulcus. (B) Activation for body part movement is shown for the dysplasic individuals, born without hands (fixed effect GLM analysis, P < 0.05 corrected; see for subject upper limb structure). Movement of each of the tested body parts elicited activation in the hand-selective area to some extent, including, as previously reported, movement of the right foot. (C and D) Group difference in activation of body part movement is shown in both Bayesian analysis (C; BF10 > 10 represents strong evidence for the existence of a group difference) and frequentist statistics (D; mixed effects F test). The sensorimotor hand area is activated more by the dysplasic group for multiple body parts. Group differences extend somewhat more inferiorly in the posterior somatosensory cortex (postcentral gyrus) compared with the motor cortex, in accordance with a larger cortical representation to the upper limbs in this area (82).
Fig. 2.Selectivity for the compensatorily used foot in the dysplasics is found in associative somatosensory cortex, but not primary sensorimotor hand area. (A) Preferred body part responses for contraction movements (winner-takes-all approach) for the control subjects follows the standard Penfield homunculus. The sensorimotor hand area is delineated in white, representing the core area activated by right hand movement in all of the control participants (each at P < 0.05 corrected), as in Fig. 1. For a presentation on grooved (uninflated) cortical reconstruction, see , and for an overlay of probabilistic cytoarchitectonic parcellation, see . CS, central sulcus; IPS, intraparietal sulcus; PoCS, postcentral sulcus. (B) Preferred body part responses for contraction movements for the dysplasic group shows a preference for shoulder (and to some extent abdomen, in the motor cortex; see below for details) movements in the hand area, despite the extensive use of the feet to perform typically manual fine-motor tasks. Preferential activation for abdomen movement was found also on the anterior inferior border of the hand region, in the central sulcus, in agreement with evidence of a potential discontinuity in the motor cortex surrounding the hand area (83, 84). This abdomen preference is not found in passive tactile stimulation of the body; compare with . Extensive preference for the foot is found outside the primary sensorimotor hand area, in the depth of the postcentral sulcus (potentially area BA 2) and extending to the aIPS. (C) Sensorimotor responses were sampled from the hand area, showing that this region in the dysplasics is more activated by proximal body parts (shoulder and abdomen/trunk) than by foot movements (P < 0.005 for both comparisons). Error bars for the control group (orange bars) represent SEM. Individual data points (blue diamonds) are presented for the five dysplasic individuals in addition to the group average. (D) Foot movement selectivity (over abdomen movement, representing a control body part that does not serve compensatorily as an effector) in the dysplasics can be found in the postcentral sulcus, intraparietal sulcus, superior parietal lobule, and premotor cortex (PMd), but not in the hand primary sensorimotor cortex, which shows the reverse preference. (E) Movement selectivity comparing the shoulder and foot in the dysplasics shows a robust preference to shoulder movement (a proximal, noncompensatory body part), rather than to foot movement, in the hand area. A preference for the foot is found in the aIPS. (F) Overall body part selectivity (comparing movement of all shared body parts; e.g., lips, shoulder, abdomen, and foot) differs between the dysplasics and controls (ANOVA body part x group interaction) in the inferior frontal lobe (including PMv) and in the sensorimotor hand area. (G) A direct comparison of the selectivity to right foot movement (vs. abdomen movement) between the dysplasics and control subjects shows potential for plasticity specific to the compensatorily used foot in the association cortices, in the inferior parietal lobule, in aIPS extending to the angular/supramarginal gyri, as well as the middle frontal gyrus, but not in the primary sensorimotor cortex. (H) Bayes factor (BF10) for difference between the groups in their differential activation to right foot movement (vs. abdomen movement) is shown. The dysplasics show different selectivity level for right foot movement compared with the controls in various cortical loci, including the sensorimotor hand area. However, the group difference found in the primary sensorimotor hand area in this analysis reflects a preference in the dysplasics group toward the abdomen movement (compare with D).