Literature DB >> 35113016

Mapping dopaminergic projections in the human brain with resting-state fMRI.

Koen V Haak1,2, Christian F Beckmann1,2,3, Marianne Oldehinkel1,2,4, Alberto Llera1,2, Myrthe Faber1,2,5, Ismael Huertas6, Jan K Buitelaar1,2, Bastiaan R Bloem7, Andre F Marquand1,2,8, Rick C Helmich1,7.   

Abstract

The striatum receives dense dopaminergic projections, making it a key region of the dopaminergic system. Its dysfunction has been implicated in various conditions including Parkinson's disease (PD) and substance use disorder. However, the investigation of dopamine-specific functioning in humans is problematic as current MRI approaches are unable to differentiate between dopaminergic and other projections. Here, we demonstrate that 'connectopic mapping' - a novel approach for characterizing fine-grained, overlapping modes of functional connectivity - can be used to map dopaminergic projections in striatum. We applied connectopic mapping to resting-state functional MRI data of the Human Connectome Project (population cohort; N = 839) and selected the second-order striatal connectivity mode for further analyses. We first validated its specificity to dopaminergic projections by demonstrating a high spatial correlation (r = 0.884) with dopamine transporter availability - a marker of dopaminergic projections - derived from DaT SPECT scans of 209 healthy controls. Next, we obtained the subject-specific second-order modes from 20 controls and 39 PD patients scanned under placebo and under dopamine replacement therapy (L-DOPA), and show that our proposed dopaminergic marker tracks PD diagnosis, symptom severity, and sensitivity to L-DOPA. Finally, across 30 daily alcohol users and 38 daily smokers, we establish strong associations with self-reported alcohol and nicotine use. Our findings provide evidence that the second-order mode of functional connectivity in striatum maps onto dopaminergic projections, tracks inter-individual differences in PD symptom severity and L-DOPA sensitivity, and exhibits strong associations with levels of nicotine and alcohol use, thereby offering a new biomarker for dopamine-related (dys)function in the human brain.
© 2022, Oldehinkel et al.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Parkinson's disease; connectopic mapping; dopaminergic projections; human; neuroscience; resting-state fMRI; striatum

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2022        PMID: 35113016      PMCID: PMC8843090          DOI: 10.7554/eLife.71846

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Elife        ISSN: 2050-084X            Impact factor:   8.140


  62 in total

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