| Literature DB >> 32249849 |
Robert Howard1, Dorothea Hämmerer2,3,4,5,6, Kathy Y Liu7, Rogier A Kievit8, Kamen A Tsvetanov9,10,11, Matthew J Betts2,3,4, Emrah Düzel2,3,5, James B Rowe8,9,11.
Abstract
The locus coeruleus (LC), the origin of noradrenergic modulation of cognitive and behavioral function, may play an important role healthy ageing and in neurodegenerative conditions. We investigated the functional significance of age-related differences in mean normalized LC signal intensity values (LC-CR) in magnetization-transfer (MT) images from the Cambridge Centre for Ageing and Neuroscience (Cam-CAN) cohort - an open-access, population-based dataset. Using structural equation modelling, we tested the pre-registered hypothesis that putatively noradrenergic (NA)-dependent functions would be more strongly associated with LC-CR in older versus younger adults. A unidimensional model (within which LC-CR related to a single factor representing all cognitive and behavioral measures) was a better fit with the data than the a priori two-factor model (within which LC-CR related to separate NA-dependent and NA-independent factors). Our findings support the concept that age-related reduction of LC structural integrity is associated with impaired cognitive and behavioral function.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32249849 PMCID: PMC7136271 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-15410-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1The measurement models of LC-dependent function.
LC mean normalized LC signal intensity (LC CR), NA-d NA-dependent factor, NA-in NA_independent factor, Cog single latent factor, EMv emotional source memory—negative valence, EMp emotional implicit memory (priming)—negative valence, EMn emotional object memory—negative valence, SS stop-signal response time (SSRT), ERr emotional reappraisal for negative emotion, ERn negative emotional reactivity, Hotel Hotel task total score, PSQI Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index total score, Edu years of education, Occ occupational complexity, Verb Spot the Word test as a proxy for verbal intelligence, Int Cattell total score as a proxy for fluid intelligence, Sent sentence comprehension, Fam familiar faces recognition.
Model fits for the two measurement models.
| Model | df | Chi-square | RMSEA | SRMR | AIC | BIC | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Two-factor | 88 | 237.01 | <0.001 | 0.053 [0.045–0.061] | 0.076 | −14366 | −14168 |
| Single factor | 90 | 241.42 | <0.001 | 0.053 [0.045–0.061] | 0.076 | −14366 | −14177 |
df degrees of freedom, RMSEA root-mean-square error of approximation, SRMR standardized root-mean-square residual, AIC Akaike information criterion, BIC Bayesian information criterion.
For each model, the number of observations was N = 605. As the confirmatory fit index (CFI) was not consistently generated, possibly due to challenging model estimation, we here report only the fit statistics generated for every model. The p-values refer to the chi-squared test (a one-sided test). Source data are provided as a Source Data file.
Unidimensional, age-adjusted, multi-group model.
| Group | Path | Standardized regression estimates | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall | Rostral | Caudal | ||
| Younger | LC −> cog (^unadjusted for age) | −0.080, | −0.025, | −0.107, |
| Age −> LC | 0.438, | 0.389, | 0.439, | |
| Age −> cog | −0.260, | −0.288, | −0.246, | |
| Older | LC −> cog (^unadjusted for age) | 0.156, | 0.194, | 0.112, |
| Age −> LC | −0.087, | −0.102, | −0.068, | |
| Age −> cog | −0.508, | −0.501, | −0.515, | |
LC mean normalized LC signal intensity (LC CR), Cog single latent factor.
Regression path estimates between LC CR, the single latent factor, and age for younger and older age groups are shown (age-unadjusted estimates indicated by (^)). Factor loadings were constrained to be equal across the two groups. Rostral and caudal analyses were exploratory and not a pre-registered step. The number of observations was N = 605 (269 in the older and 336 in the younger group). The z-values represent the Wald statistic (obtained by dividing the parameter value by its standard error), and the p(>|z|) values test the null hypothesis that the parameter equals zero in the population (a two-sided test). Statistically significant (p(>|z|) < 0.05) values are indicated by (**). No additional adjustments were made for multiple comparisons. Source data are provided as a Source Data file.
Unidimensional, age-adjusted, multi-group model.
| Path | Older (younger) | |
|---|---|---|
| Standardized regression estimates | ||
| Cog −> EMn | 0.744, | 0.553 (0.440) |
| Cog −> EMp | 0.088, | 0.008 (0.004) |
| Cog −> EMv | 0.789, | 0.622 (0.402) |
| Cog −> SS | 0.096, | 0.009 (0.005) |
| Cog −> ERr | 0.268, | 0.072 (0.044) |
| Cog −> ERn | 0.129, | 0.017 (0.008) |
| Cog −> Hotel | −0.323, | 0.104 (0.059) |
| Cog −> PSQI | −0.186, | 0.034 (0.015) |
| Cog −> Edu | 0.446, | 0.199 (0.151) |
| Cog −> Occ | −0.198, | 0.039 (0.013) |
| Cog −> Verb | 0.351, | 0.123 (0.053) |
| Cog −> Int | 0.668, | 0.446 (0.283) |
| Cog −> Sent | −0.041, | 0.002 (0.001) |
| Cog −> Fam | 0.249, | 0.062 (0.037) |
Cog single latent factor, EMv emotional source memory—negative valence, EMp emotional implicit memory (priming)—negative valence, EMn emotional object memory—negative valence, SS stop signal response time (SSRT), ERr emotional regulation negative scale reappraisal, ERn emotional regulation reactivity to negative, Hotel Hotel task total score, PSQI Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index total score, Edu years of education, Occ occupational complexity, Verb Spot the Word test as a proxy for verbal intelligence, Int Cattell total score as a proxy for fluid intelligence, Sent sentence comprehension, Fam familiar faces recognition.
Regression path estimates and R2 (proportion of variance) for the observed cognitive/behavioral variables in older and younger adults are shown. Factor loadings and variances were constrained to be equal across the two groups. The number of observations was N = 605 (269 in the older and 336 in the younger group). Higher measures for SS, Hotel, PSQI, and Occ indicate worse outcomes; thus, they are expected to have negative correlations with LC CR. The z-values represent the Wald statistic (obtained by dividing the parameter value by its standard error) and the p(>|z|) values test the null hypothesis that the parameter equals zero in the population (a two-sided test). Statistically significant (p(>|z|) < 0.05) values are indicated by (**). No additional adjustments were made for multiple comparisons. Source data are provided as a Source Data file.
Cognitive and behavioral measures from the Cam-CAN database proposed to rely on either NA-dependent or NA-independent processes (see ref. [32] for a full description of the measures) and included in the SEM analyses.
| Measure | Description | Outcome variable(s) used in the analysis |
|---|---|---|
| Emotional memory* | Study: view (positive, neutral, or negative) background image, then object image superimposed, and imagine a “story” linking the two; test (incidental): view and identify degraded image of (studied, new) object, then judge memory and confidence for visually intact image of same object, then recall valence and any details of background image from study phase. | For negative valence: priming (accuracy for studied vs. new degraded objects, EMp); familiarity (accuracy for item memory, EMn); recollection (accuracy for background memory, EMv) |
| Emotional regulation* | View (positive, neutral, negative) film clips under instructions to simply “watch” or “reappraise” (attempt to reduce emotional impact by reinterpreting its meaning; for some negative films only), then rate emotional impact (how negative, positive they felt during clip) and the degree to which they successfully reappraised. | Negative regulation (ERr) score: “reappraise” negative vs. “watch” negative ratings and negative reactivity (ERn) score: “watch” negative vs. “watch” neutral negative ratings. |
| Stop-Signal, Go/No-Go* | On Go trials, view a black arrow pointing left or right and indicate the direction of the arrow by pressing left/right buttons. In No-Go trials, participants are required to make no response to a stop signal, which is a red left/right arrow and concurrent tone. | Time needed to inhibit responses on the Stop-Signal trials, also known as Stop-Signal Response time (SSRT). Higher values indicate poorer performance. |
| Hotel Task* | Perform tasks in role of hotel manager: write customer bills, sort money, proofread advert, sort playing cards, alphabetize list of names. Total time must be allocated equally between tasks; there is not enough time to complete any one task. | Time taken to complete task. Higher values indicate poorer performance. |
| Sleep quality* | Complete Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) which assesses sleep disturbances. | PSQI total score which measures overall sleep disturbance. Higher values indicate worse sleep outcomes. |
| Years of education* | Proposed indicator of cognitive reserve. | Number of years in formal education. |
| Occupational complexity* | Proposed indicator of cognitive reserve. | Score of 1–10 where 10 is least complex. Higher values indicate poorer occupational performance. |
| Verbal intelligence* | Proposed indicator of cognitive reserve. View pairs of items comprising one real word and one invented non-word, and identify the real word. | Spot the Word test score—number of correct answers. |
| Fluid intelligence | Complete nonverbal puzzles involving series completion, classification, matrices, and conditions. | Cattell test score |
| Sentence comprehension | Listen to and judge grammatical acceptability of partial sentences, beginning with an (ambiguous, unambiguous) sentence stem (e.g., Tom noticed that landing planes…) followed by a disambiguating continuation word (e.g., are) in a different voice. Ambiguity is either semantic or syntactic, with empirically determined dominant and subordinate interpretations. | Reaction time, proportion of’unacceptable responses in each condition. Higher values indicate poorer performance. |
| Face recognition for familiar faces | View faces of famous people (and some unknown foils), judge whether each is familiar, and if so, what is known about the person (occupation, nationality, origin of fame, etc.), then attempt to provide person’s name. | Accuracy (identifying information or full name given) as a proportion of number of faces recognized as familiar, subtracting false alarms (unknown faces given “familiar” response) |
Measures proposed to be NA-dependent are indicated by (*). Measures for which higher values indicate poorer outcomes/performance were predicted to have a negative or inverse correlation with LC CR.