Moskowitz Simon, Russ David W, Clark Leatha A, Wages Nathan P, Grooms Dustin R, Woods Adam J, Suhr Julie, Simon Janet E, O'Shea Andrew, Criss Cody R, Fadda Paolo, Clark Brian C
Ohio Musculoskeletal and Neurological Institute (OMNI), Ohio University, 250 Irvine Hall, Athens, OH, 45701, USA.
School of Rehabilitation and Communication Sciences, Ohio University, Athens, OH, USA.
Geroscience. 2021 Jun;43(3):1383-1404. doi: 10.1007/s11357-020-00303-z. Epub 2020 Nov 24.
The capacity to move is essential for independence and declines with age. Slow movement speed, in particular, is strongly associated with negative health outcomes. Prior research on mobility (herein defined as movement slowness) and aging has largely focused on musculoskeletal mechanisms and processes. More recent work has provided growing evidence for a significant role of the nervous system in contributing to reduced mobility in older adults. In this article, we report four pieces of complementary evidence from behavioral, genetic, and neuroimaging experiments that, we believe, provide theoretical support for the assertion that the basal ganglia and its dopaminergic function are responsible, in part, for age-related reductions in mobility. We report four a posteriori findings from an existing dataset: (1) slower central activation of ballistic force development is associated with worse mobility among older adults; (2) older adults with the Val/Met intermediate catecholamine-O-methyl-transferase (COMT) genotype involved in dopamine degradation exhibit greater mobility than their homozygous counterparts; (3) there are moderate relationships between performance times from a series of lower and upper extremity tasks supporting the notion that movement speed in older adults is a trait-like attribute; and (4) there is a relationship of functional connectivity within the medial orbofrontal (mOFC) cortico-striatal network and measures of mobility, suggesting that a potential neural mechanism for impaired mobility with aging is the deterioration of the integrity of key regions within the mOFC cortico-striatal network. These findings align with recent basic and clinical science work suggesting that the basal ganglia and its dopaminergic function are mechanistically linked to age-related reductions in mobility capacity.
移动能力对于独立性至关重要,且会随着年龄增长而下降。尤其是移动速度缓慢,与负面健康结果密切相关。先前关于运动能力(在此定义为行动迟缓)与衰老的研究主要集中在肌肉骨骼机制和过程上。最近的研究越来越多地证明,神经系统在导致老年人运动能力下降方面发挥着重要作用。在本文中,我们报告了来自行为、基因和神经影像学实验的四项补充证据,我们认为这些证据为基底神经节及其多巴胺能功能部分导致与年龄相关的运动能力下降这一论断提供了理论支持。我们从一个现有数据集中报告了四项事后发现:(1)老年人中弹道力量发展的中枢激活较慢与运动能力较差有关;(2)携带参与多巴胺降解的Val/Met中间型儿茶酚-O-甲基转移酶(COMT)基因型的老年人比其纯合子对应者表现出更大的运动能力;(3)一系列下肢和上肢任务的执行时间之间存在适度的相关性,支持老年人的运动速度是一种类似特质的属性这一观点;(4)内侧眶额皮质(mOFC)皮质-纹状体网络内的功能连接与运动能力测量之间存在关系,这表明随着年龄增长运动能力受损的潜在神经机制是mOFC皮质-纹状体网络内关键区域完整性的恶化。这些发现与最近的基础和临床科学研究一致,表明基底神经节及其多巴胺能功能在机制上与与年龄相关的运动能力下降有关。