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      Genetic impact on cognition and brain function in newly diagnosed Parkinson’s disease: ICICLE-PD study

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          Abstract

          See Dujardin (doi: [Related article:]10.1093/brain/awu218) for a scientific commentary on this article. Nombela et al. present data from the ICICLE-PD study of cognition in newly diagnosed Parkinson’s disease. Consistent with the ‘Dual Syndrome’ hypothesis, impairments in executive function reflect a frontal dopaminergic syndrome modulated by COMT genotype, while visuospatial and memory deficits reflect disruption of temporo-parietal systems modulated by MAPT and APOE.

          Abstract

          Parkinson’s disease is associated with multiple cognitive impairments and increased risk of dementia, but the extent of these deficits varies widely among patients. The ICICLE-PD study was established to define the characteristics and prevalence of cognitive change soon after diagnosis, in a representative cohort of patients, using a multimodal approach. Specifically, we tested the ‘Dual Syndrome’ hypothesis for cognitive impairment in Parkinson’s disease, which distinguishes an executive syndrome (affecting the frontostriatal regions due to dopaminergic deficits) from a posterior cortical syndrome (affecting visuospatial, mnemonic and semantic functions related to Lewy body pathology and secondary cholinergic loss). An incident Parkinson’s disease cohort ( n = 168, median 8 months from diagnosis to participation) and matched control group ( n = 85) were recruited to a neuroimaging study at two sites in the UK. All participants underwent clinical, neuropsychological and functional magnetic resonance imaging assessments. The three neuroimaging tasks (Tower of London, Spatial Rotations and Memory Encoding Tasks) were designed to probe executive, visuospatial and memory encoding domains, respectively. Patients were also genotyped for three polymorphisms associated with cognitive change in Parkinson’s disease and related disorders: (i) rs4680 for COMT Val158Met polymorphism; (ii) rs9468 for MAPT H1 versus H2 haplotype; and (iii) rs429358 for APOE-ε2, 3, 4. We identified performance deficits in all three cognitive domains, which were associated with regionally specific changes in cortical activation. Task-specific regional activations in Parkinson’s disease were linked with genetic variation: the rs4680 polymorphism modulated the effect of levodopa therapy on planning-related activations in the frontoparietal network; the MAPT haplotype modulated parietal activations associated with spatial rotations; and APOE allelic variation influenced the magnitude of activation associated with memory encoding. This study demonstrates that neurocognitive deficits are common even in recently diagnosed patients with Parkinson’s disease, and that the associated regional brain activations are influenced by genotype. These data further support the dual syndrome hypothesis of cognitive change in Parkinson’s disease. Longitudinal data will confirm the extent to which these early neurocognitive changes, and their genetic factors, influence the long-term risk of dementia in Parkinson’s disease. The combination of genetics and functional neuroimaging provides a potentially useful method for stratification and identification of candidate markers, in future clinical trials against cognitive decline in Parkinson’s disease.

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          Gene dose of apolipoprotein E type 4 allele and the risk of Alzheimer's disease in late onset families.

          The apolipoprotein E type 4 allele (APOE-epsilon 4) is genetically associated with the common late onset familial and sporadic forms of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Risk for AD increased from 20% to 90% and mean age at onset decreased from 84 to 68 years with increasing number of APOE-epsilon 4 alleles in 42 families with late onset AD. Thus APOE-epsilon 4 gene dose is a major risk factor for late onset AD and, in these families, homozygosity for APOE-epsilon 4 was virtually sufficient to cause AD by age 80.
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            Inverted-U-shaped dopamine actions on human working memory and cognitive control.

            Brain dopamine (DA) has long been implicated in cognitive control processes, including working memory. However, the precise role of DA in cognition is not well-understood, partly because there is large variability in the response to dopaminergic drugs both across different behaviors and across different individuals. We review evidence from a series of studies with experimental animals, healthy humans, and patients with Parkinson's disease, which highlight two important factors that contribute to this large variability. First, the existence of an optimum DA level for cognitive function implicates the need to take into account baseline levels of DA when isolating the effects of DA. Second, cognitive control is a multifactorial phenomenon, requiring a dynamic balance between cognitive stability and cognitive flexibility. These distinct components might implicate the prefrontal cortex and the striatum, respectively. Manipulating DA will thus have paradoxical consequences for distinct cognitive control processes, depending on distinct basal or optimal levels of DA in different brain regions. Copyright © 2011 Society of Biological Psychiatry. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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              Specific impairments of planning.

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              An information-processing model is outlined that predicts that performance on non-routine tasks can be impaired independently of performance on routine tasks. The model is related to views on frontal lobe functions, particularly those of Luria. Two methods of obtaining more rigorous tests of the model are discussed. One makes use of ideas from artificial intelligence to derive a task heavily loaded on planning abilities. A group of patients with left anterior lesions has a specific deficit on the task. Subsidiary investigations support the inference that this is a planning impairment.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Brain
                Brain
                brainj
                brain
                Brain
                Oxford University Press
                0006-8950
                1460-2156
                October 2014
                30 July 2014
                30 July 2014
                : 137
                : 10
                : 2743-2758
                Affiliations
                1 John van Geest Centre for Brain Repair, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK
                2 Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK
                3 Medical Research Council, Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, Cambridge, UK
                4 Behavioural and Clinical Neuroscience Institute, University of Cambridge, UK
                5 Computational, Cognitive and Clinical Neuroscience Laboratory, Imperial College London, London, UK
                6 Brain and Mind Institute, University of Western Ontario, London, Canada
                7 Department of Psychology, University of Western Ontario, London, Canada
                8 Institute for Ageing and Health, Newcastle University, Newcastle, UK
                9 Griffith Health Institute and School of Medicine, Griffith University, Gold Coast, Australia
                10 Institute of Genetic Medicine, Newcastle University, Newcastle, UK
                11 Department of Psychiatry, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK
                12 Imperial College London, London, UK
                13 Department of Clinical Medicine, Positron Emission Tomography Centre, Aarhus University, Denmark
                Author notes
                Correspondence to: Cristina Nombela, John van Geest Centre for Brain Repair, University of Cambridge, Cambridge Biomedical Campus, CB2 0PY, UK E-mail: dra.cristinanombela@ 123456gmail.com

                *These authors contributed equally to this work.

                See Dujardin (doi: [Related article:]10.1093/brain/awu218) for a scientific commentary on this article.

                Article
                awu201
                10.1093/brain/awu201
                4163033
                25080285
                bbb465c5-6475-421e-8a28-936a242323a2
                © The Author (2014). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain.

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 20 January 2014
                : 11 May 2014
                : 14 June 2014
                Page count
                Pages: 16
                Categories
                Original Articles

                Neurosciences
                parkinson’s disease,cognition,functional mri,genetics
                Neurosciences
                parkinson’s disease, cognition, functional mri, genetics

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