GABA, glutamatergic dynamics and BOLD contrast assessed concurrently using functional MRS during a cognitive task

Author:

Craven Alexander R.123ORCID,Dwyer Gerard13ORCID,Ersland Lars23,Kazimierczak Katarzyna1,Noeske Ralph4,Sandøy Lydia Brunvoll15,Johnsen Erik367,Hugdahl Kenneth168

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological and Medical Psychology University of Bergen Bergen Norway

2. Department of Clinical Engineering Haukeland University Hospital Bergen Norway

3. NORMENT Center of Excellence Haukeland University Hospital Bergen Norway

4. GE HealthCare Berlin Germany

5. Department of Physics and Technology University of Bergen Bergen Norway

6. Division of Psychiatry Haukeland University Hospital Bergen Norway

7. Department of Clinical Medicine University of Bergen Bergen Norway

8. Department of Radiology Haukeland University Hospital Bergen Norway

Abstract

AbstractA recurring issue in functional neuroimaging is how to link task‐driven haemodynamic blood oxygen level dependent functional MRI (BOLD‐fMRI) responses to underlying neurochemistry at the synaptic level. Glutamate and γ‐aminobutyric acid (GABA), the major excitatory and inhibitory neurotransmitters respectively, are typically measured with MRS sequences separately from fMRI, in the absence of a task. The present study aims to resolve this disconnect, developing acquisition and processing techniques to simultaneously assess GABA, glutamate and glutamine (Glx) and BOLD in relation to a cognitive task, at 3 T. Healthy subjects (N = 81) performed a cognitive task (Eriksen flanker), which was presented visually in a task‐OFF, task‐ON block design, with individual event onset timing jittered with respect to the MRS readout. fMRS data were acquired from the medial anterior cingulate cortex during task performance, using an adapted MEGA‐PRESS implementation incorporating unsuppressed water‐reference signals at a regular interval. These allowed for continuous assessment of BOLD activation, through T2*‐related changes in water linewidth. BOLD‐fMRI data were additionally acquired. A novel linear model was used to extract modelled metabolite spectra associated with discrete functional stimuli, building on well established processing and quantification tools. Behavioural outcomes from the flanker task, and activation patterns from the BOLD‐fMRI sequence, were as expected from the literature. BOLD response assessed through fMRS showed a significant correlation with fMRI, specific to the fMRS‐targeted region of interest; fMRS‐assessed BOLD additionally correlated with lengthening of response time in the incongruent flanker condition. While no significant task‐related changes were observed for GABA+, a significant increase in measured Glx levels (~8.8%) was found between task‐OFF and task‐ON periods. These findings verify the efficacy of our protocol and analysis pipelines for the simultaneous assessment of metabolite dynamics and BOLD. As well as establishing a robust basis for further work using these techniques, we also identify a number of clear directions for further refinement in future studies.

Funder

European Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Spectroscopy,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,Molecular Medicine

Cited by 1 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Neurotransmitter function;Reference Module in Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Psychology;2024

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