Department of Biomedical and Clinical Sciences "L. Sacco" and Department of Pathophysiology and Transplantation, University of Milan, via G. B. Grassi 74, 20157 Milano, Italy.
Department of Neurosciences, Biomedicine and Movement Sciences, University of Verona, Strada Le Grazie 8, 37143 Verona, Italy.
Neuroscience. 2018 Dec 1;394:14-22. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2018.10.005. Epub 2018 Oct 18.
Being able to inhibit an impending movement in response to a contextual change is a distinctive feature of action control. Such inhibitory control relies on a complex cortical-subcortical network, including posterior prefrontal regions such as caudal inferior frontal gyrus and pre-supplementary motor area. According to hierarchical models of action control, both areas represent the intermediate level between prefronto-dependent and motor-related cortices. Going at a lower level, accumulating evidence speaks for an involvement of the primary motor cortex (M1) to dorsal premotor cortex (PMCd) or supplementary motor area proper (SMA-proper) pathways in producing inhibitory control. However, the clear-cut evidence for this conjecture is still missing. The aim of the present paper was to start filling this gap, investigating this lowest level of inhibitory control. We stimulated PMCd in a group of healthy volunteers with transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) or sham TMS during the response phase of a STOP-signal task performed with the lips. In a separate experimental group, we applied effective TMS/sham TMS to SMA-proper during the same task. We found that effective TMS over PMCd increased false-start errors in STOP trials (p = 0.0005), but had no effect on GO trial performance (p = 0.85). Effective TMS on SMA-proper produced no effect on STOP trials' performance (p = 0.31) nor in the GO trial performance (p = 0.56). Our data show that there is at least a portion of PMCd playing a distinctive role in the control of mouth-related M1 during instructed visuomotor inhibitory behavior. This region could therefore represent a low-level hierarchical node for externally cued action inhibition.
能够根据上下文变化抑制即将发生的运动是动作控制的一个显著特征。这种抑制控制依赖于一个复杂的皮质-皮质下网络,包括后前额区域,如额下回后部和辅助运动区。根据动作控制的层次模型,这两个区域代表了与前额叶相关和与运动相关的皮质之间的中间水平。在较低的水平上,越来越多的证据表明初级运动皮层(M1)到背侧前运动皮层(PMCd)或辅助运动区本身(SMA-proper)通路在产生抑制控制方面有参与。然而,这一假设的明确证据仍然缺失。本文的目的是开始填补这一空白,研究这种最低级别的抑制控制。我们在一组健康志愿者中用经颅磁刺激(TMS)或假 TMS 刺激 PMCd,在进行唇部 STOP 信号任务的反应阶段。在一个单独的实验组中,我们在相同的任务中对 SMA-proper 施加有效的 TMS/假 TMS。我们发现,PMCd 上的有效 TMS 增加了 STOP 试验中的假启动错误(p=0.0005),但对 GO 试验的表现没有影响(p=0.85)。SMA-proper 上的有效 TMS 对 STOP 试验的表现没有影响(p=0.31),对 GO 试验的表现也没有影响(p=0.56)。我们的数据表明,PMCd 中至少有一部分在指导视觉运动抑制行为中对与口相关的 M1 的控制中发挥了独特的作用。因此,该区域可能代表了外部提示动作抑制的低级层次节点。