Watanabe Takamitsu, Hanajima Ritsuko, Shirota Yuichiro, Tsutsumi Ryosuke, Shimizu Takahiro, Hayashi Toshihiro, Terao Yasuo, Ugawa Yoshikazu, Katsura Masaki, Kunimatsu Akira, Ohtomo Kuni, Hirose Satoshi, Miyashita Yasushi, Konishi Seiki
Departments of Physiology, Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, University College London, London WC1N 3AR, United Kingdom,
Neurology, and.
J Neurosci. 2015 Mar 25;35(12):4813-23. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3761-14.2015.
Stop-signal task (SST) has been a key paradigm for probing human brain mechanisms underlying response inhibition, and the inhibition observed in SST is now considered to largely depend on a fronto basal ganglia network consisting mainly of right inferior frontal cortex, pre-supplementary motor area (pre-SMA), and basal ganglia, including subthalamic nucleus, striatum (STR), and globus pallidus pars interna (GPi). However, causal relationships between these frontal regions and basal ganglia are not fully understood in humans. Here, we partly examined these causal links by measuring human fMRI activity during SST before and after excitatory/inhibitory repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) of pre-SMA. We first confirmed that the behavioral performance of SST was improved by excitatory rTMS and impaired by inhibitory rTMS. Afterward, we found that these behavioral changes were well predicted by rTMS-induced modulation of brain activity in pre-SMA, STR, and GPi during SST. Moreover, by examining the effects of the rTMS on resting-state functional connectivity between these three regions, we showed that the magnetic stimulation of pre-SMA significantly affected intrinsic connectivity between pre-SMA and STR, and between STR and GPi. Furthermore, the magnitudes of changes in resting-state connectivity were also correlated with the behavioral changes seen in SST. These results suggest a causal relationship between pre-SMA and GPi via STR during response inhibition, and add direct evidence that the fronto basal ganglia network for response inhibition consists of multiple top-down regulation pathways in humans.
停止信号任务(SST)一直是探究人类大脑反应抑制机制的关键范式,目前认为在SST中观察到的抑制作用很大程度上依赖于一个主要由右侧额下回、前辅助运动区(pre-SMA)以及基底神经节(包括丘脑底核、纹状体(STR)和苍白球内侧部(GPi))组成的额底神经节网络。然而,在人类中,这些额叶区域与基底神经节之间的因果关系尚未完全明确。在此,我们通过测量在对前辅助运动区进行兴奋性/抑制性重复经颅磁刺激(rTMS)前后SST期间的人类功能磁共振成像(fMRI)活动,部分地研究了这些因果联系。我们首先证实,兴奋性rTMS可改善SST的行为表现,而抑制性rTMS则会损害其表现。随后,我们发现这些行为变化可通过rTMS在SST期间对前辅助运动区、纹状体和苍白球内侧部脑活动的调节得到很好的预测。此外,通过研究rTMS对这三个区域之间静息态功能连接的影响,我们发现对前辅助运动区的磁刺激显著影响了前辅助运动区与纹状体之间以及纹状体与苍白球内侧部之间的内在连接。此外,静息态连接变化的幅度也与SST中观察到的行为变化相关。这些结果表明在反应抑制过程中,前辅助运动区与苍白球内侧部之间通过纹状体存在因果关系,并直接证明了人类中用于反应抑制的额底神经节网络由多个自上而下的调节通路组成。