GABAergic modulation of visual gamma and alpha oscillations and its consequences for working memory performance
Data de publicació
2014ISSN
0960-9822
Resum
Background: Impressive in vitro research in rodents and computational modeling has uncovered the core mechanisms responsible for generating neuronal oscillations. In particular, GABAergic interneurons play a crucial role for synchronizing neural populations. Do these mechanistic principles apply to human oscillations associated with function? To address this, we recorded ongoing brain activity using magnetoencephalography (MEG) in healthy human subjects participating in a double-blind pharmacological study receiving placebo, 0.5 mg and 1.5 mg of lorazepam (LZP; a benzodiazepine upregulating GABAergic conductance). Participants performed a demanding visuospatial working memory (WM) task. Results: We found that occipital gamma power associated with WM recognition increased with LZP dosage. Importantly, the frequency of the gamma activity decreased with dosage, as predicted by models derived from the rat hippocampus. A regionally specific gamma increase correlated with the drug-related performance decrease. Despite the system-wide pharmacological intervention, gamma power drug modulations were specific to visual cortex: sensorimotor gamma power and frequency during button presses remained unaffected. In contrast, occipital alpha power modulations during the delay interval decreased parametrically with drug dosage, predicting performance impairment. Consistent with alpha oscillations reflecting functional inhibition, LZP affected alpha power strongly in early visual regions not required for the task demonstrating a regional specific occipital impairment. Conclusions: GABAergic interneurons are strongly implicated in the generation of gamma and alpha oscillations in human occipital cortex where drug-induced power modulations predicted WM performance. Our findings bring us an important step closer to linking neuronal dynamics to behavior by embracing established animal models.
Tipus de document
Article
Versió del document
Versió publicada
Llengua
Anglès
Matèries (CDU)
61 - Medicina
Pàgines
9
Publicat per
Elsevier
Col·lecció
24; 24
Publicat a
Current Biology
Citació recomanada
Lozano-Soldevilla, Diego; Ter Huurne, Niels; Cools, Roshan [et al.]. GABAergic Modulation of Visual Gamma and Alpha Oscillations and Its Consequences for Working Memory Performance. Current Biology, 2014, 24(24), p. 2878-2887. Disponible en: <https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0960982214012937?via%3Dihub>. Fecha de acceso: 31 ene. 2025. DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2014.10.017
Nota
This work was supported by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research, by an Open Competition/MaGW grant (grant number 400-09-491 to D.L.-S., R.C., and O.J.), and by a VICI grant (grant number 453-09-002 to O.J.). We thank Paul Gaalman and Rene Scheeringa for assistance with MRI collection; Sander Berends for assistance with MEG recordings; and Arjen Stolk for assistance with the real-time head localizer tool.
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Drets
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