Yoon Jong H, Grandelis Anthony, Maddock Richard J
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science, Stanford University, Palo Alto, California 94304, and
Department of Psychiatry and Imaging Research Center, University of California, Davis, California 95817.
J Neurosci. 2016 Nov 16;36(46):11788-11794. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1970-16.2016.
The discovery of neural mechanisms of working memory (WM) would significantly enhance our understanding of complex human behaviors and guide treatment development for WM-related impairments found in neuropsychiatric conditions and aging. Although the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) has long been considered critical for WM, we still know little about the neural elements and pathways within the DLPFC that support WM in humans. In this study, we tested whether an individual's DLPFC gamma-aminobutryic acid (GABA) content predicts individual differences in WM task performance using a novel behavioral approach. Twenty-three healthy adults completed a task that measured the unique contribution of major WM components (memory load, maintenance, and distraction resistance) to performance. This was done to address the possibility that components have differing GABA dependencies and the failure to parse WM into components would lead to missing true associations with GABA. The subjects then had their DLPFC GABA content measured by single-voxel proton magnetic spectroscopy. We found that individuals with lower DLPFC GABA showed greater performance degradation with higher load, accounting for 31% of variance, p = 0.015. This relationship was component, neurochemical, and brain region specific. DLPFC GABA content did not predict performance sensitivity to other components tested; DLPFC glutamate + glutamine and visual cortical GABA content did not predict load sensitivity. These results confirm the involvement of DLPFC GABA in WM load processing in humans and implicate factors controlling DLPFC GABA content in the neural mechanisms of WM and its impairments.
This study demonstrated for the first time that the amount of gamma-aminobutryic acid (GABA), the major inhibitory neurotransmitter of the brain, in an individual's prefrontal cortex predicts working memory (WM) task performance. Given that WM is required for many of the most characteristic cognitive and behavioral capabilities in humans, this finding could have a significant impact on our understanding of the neural basis of complex human behavior. Furthermore, this finding suggests that efforts to preserve or increase brain GABA levels could be fruitful in remediating WM-related deficits associated with neuropsychiatric conditions.
工作记忆(WM)神经机制的发现将显著增进我们对复杂人类行为的理解,并指导针对神经精神疾病和衰老中出现的与工作记忆相关损伤的治疗开发。尽管背外侧前额叶皮层(DLPFC)长期以来被认为对工作记忆至关重要,但我们对支持人类工作记忆的DLPFC内的神经元件和通路仍知之甚少。在本研究中,我们使用一种新颖的行为方法测试了个体的DLPFCγ-氨基丁酸(GABA)含量是否能预测工作记忆任务表现的个体差异。23名健康成年人完成了一项任务,该任务测量了主要工作记忆成分(记忆负荷、维持和抗干扰)对表现的独特贡献。这样做是为了解决各成分具有不同GABA依赖性以及未能将工作记忆分解为成分会导致错过与GABA的真正关联的可能性。然后,通过单体素质子磁共振波谱测量受试者的DLPFC GABA含量。我们发现,DLPFC GABA含量较低的个体在负荷较高时表现出更大的性能下降,占方差的31%,p = 0.015。这种关系是成分、神经化学和脑区特异性的。DLPFC GABA含量不能预测对测试的其他成分的表现敏感性;DLPFC谷氨酸+谷氨酰胺和视觉皮层GABA含量不能预测负荷敏感性。这些结果证实了DLPFC GABA参与人类工作记忆负荷处理,并暗示控制DLPFC GABA含量的因素在工作记忆及其损伤的神经机制中起作用。
本研究首次表明,大脑主要抑制性神经递质γ-氨基丁酸(GABA)在个体前额叶皮层中的含量可预测工作记忆(WM)任务表现。鉴于工作记忆是人类许多最具特征性的认知和行为能力所必需的,这一发现可能会对我们对复杂人类行为神经基础的理解产生重大影响。此外,这一发现表明,在修复与神经精神疾病相关的工作记忆相关缺陷方面,努力保持或提高大脑GABA水平可能会取得成效。