Neural basis of speech and grammar symptoms in non-fluent variant primary progressive aphasia spectrum

Author:

Lorca-Puls Diego L12ORCID,Gajardo-Vidal Andrea134,Mandelli Maria Luisa1,Illán-Gala Ignacio567ORCID,Ezzes Zoe1,Wauters Lisa D18,Battistella Giovanni19,Bogley Rian1,Ratnasiri Buddhika1,Licata Abigail E1,Battista Petronilla1710,García Adolfo M71112ORCID,Tee Boon Lead17ORCID,Lukic Sladjana113,Boxer Adam L1,Rosen Howard J1,Seeley William W114,Grinberg Lea T1714ORCID,Spina Salvatore1ORCID,Miller Bruce L17,Miller Zachary A1ORCID,Henry Maya L815,Dronkers Nina F1617,Gorno-Tempini Maria Luisa1

Affiliation:

1. Memory and Aging Center, Department of Neurology, UCSF Weill Institute for Neurosciences, University of California , SanFrancisco, CA 94158 , USA

2. Sección de Neurología, Departamento de Especialidades, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de Concepción , Concepción, 4070105 , Chile

3. Centro de Investigación en Complejidad Social (CICS), Facultad de Gobierno, Universidad del Desarrollo , Santiago, 7590943 , Chile

4. Dirección de Investigación y Doctorados, Vicerrectoría de Investigación y Doctorados, Universidad del Desarrollo , Concepción, 4070001 , Chile

5. Sant Pau Memory Unit, Department of Neurology, Biomedical Research Institute Sant Pau, Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona , Barcelona, 08025 , Spain

6. Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Enfermedades Neurodegenerativas (CIBERNED) , Madrid, 28029 , Spain

7. Global Brain Health Institute, University of California , San Francisco, CA 94143 , USA

8. Department of Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences, University of Texas , Austin, TX 78712-0114 , USA

9. Department of Otolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery, Massachusetts Eye and Ear and Harvard Medical School , Boston, MA 02114 , USA

10. Laboratory of Neuropsychology, Istituti Clinici Scientifici Maugeri IRCCS , Bari, 70124 , Italy

11. Centro de Neurociencias Cognitivas, Universidad de San Andrés , Buenos Aires, B1644BID , Argentina

12. Departamento de Lingüística y Literatura, Facultad de Humanidades, Universidad de Santiago de Chile , Santiago, 9160000 , Chile

13. Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Ruth S. Ammon College of Education and Health Sciences, Adelphi University , Garden City, NY 11530-0701 , USA

14. Department of Pathology, University of California San Francisco , San Francisco, CA 94143 , USA

15. Department of Neurology, Dell Medical School, University of Texas , Austin, TX 78712 , USA

16. Department of Psychology, University of California , Berkeley, CA 94720 , USA

17. Department of Neurology, University of California , Davis, CA 95817 , USA

Abstract

Abstract The non-fluent/agrammatic variant of primary progressive aphasia (nfvPPA) is a neurodegenerative syndrome primarily defined by the presence of apraxia of speech (AoS) and/or expressive agrammatism. In addition, many patients exhibit dysarthria and/or receptive agrammatism. This leads to substantial phenotypic variation within the speech-language domain across individuals and time, in terms of both the specific combination of symptoms as well as their severity. How to resolve such phenotypic heterogeneity in nfvPPA is a matter of debate. ‘Splitting’ views propose separate clinical entities: ‘primary progressive apraxia of speech’ when AoS occurs in the absence of expressive agrammatism, ‘progressive agrammatic aphasia’ (PAA) in the opposite case, and ‘AOS + PAA’ when mixed motor speech and language symptoms are clearly present. While therapeutic interventions typically vary depending on the predominant symptom (e.g. AoS versus expressive agrammatism), the existence of behavioural, anatomical and pathological overlap across these phenotypes argues against drawing such clear-cut boundaries. In the current study, we contribute to this debate by mapping behaviour to brain in a large, prospective cohort of well characterized patients with nfvPPA (n = 104). We sought to advance scientific understanding of nfvPPA and the neural basis of speech-language by uncovering where in the brain the degree of MRI-based atrophy is associated with inter-patient variability in the presence and severity of AoS, dysarthria, expressive agrammatism or receptive agrammatism. Our cross-sectional examination of brain-behaviour relationships revealed three main observations. First, we found that the neural correlates of AoS and expressive agrammatism in nfvPPA lie side by side in the left posterior inferior frontal lobe, explaining their behavioural dissociation/association in previous reports. Second, we identified a ‘left-right’ and ‘ventral-dorsal’ neuroanatomical distinction between AoS versus dysarthria, highlighting (i) that dysarthria, but not AoS, is significantly influenced by tissue loss in right-hemisphere motor-speech regions; and (ii) that, within the left hemisphere, dysarthria and AoS map onto dorsally versus ventrally located motor-speech regions, respectively. Third, we confirmed that, within the large-scale grammar network, left frontal tissue loss is preferentially involved in expressive agrammatism and left temporal tissue loss in receptive agrammatism. Our findings thus contribute to define the function and location of the epicentres within the large-scale neural networks vulnerable to neurodegenerative changes in nfvPPA. We propose that nfvPPA be redefined as an umbrella term subsuming a spectrum of speech and/or language phenotypes that are closely linked by the underlying neuroanatomy and neuropathology.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

The UCSF Neurodegenerative Disease Brain Bank

Rainwater Charitable Foundation

Atlantic Fellow

Global Brain Health Institute

National Institute On Aging

Alzheimer’s Society

Alzheimer’s Association GBHI

Multi-partner Consortium to Expand Dementia Research in Latin America

Fogarty International Center

Rainwater Charitable Foundation’s Tau Consortium

University of California

San Francisco

Chilean National Agency for Research and Development

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Neurology (clinical)

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