Association between Inhibitory–Excitatory Balance and Brain Activity Response during Cognitive Flexibility in Young and Older Individuals

Author:

Rodríguez-Nieto Geraldine,Alvarez-Anacona David F.ORCID,Mantini DanteORCID,Edden Richard A. E.,Oeltzschner Georg,Sunaert Stefan,Swinnen Stephan P.ORCID

Abstract

Cognitive flexibility represents the capacity to switch among different mental schemes, providing an adaptive advantage to a changing environment. The neural underpinnings of this executive function have been deeply studied in humans through fMRI, showing that the left inferior frontal cortex (IFC) and the left inferior parietal lobule (IPL) are crucial. Here, we investigated the inhibitory–excitatory balance in these regions by means of γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA+) and glutamate + glutamine (Glx), measured with magnetic resonance spectroscopy, during a cognitive flexibility task and its relationship with the performance level and the local task-induced blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) response in 40 young (18–35 years; 26 female) and 40 older (18–35 years; 21 female) human adults. As the IFC and the IPL are richly connected regions, we also examined whole-brain effects associated with their local metabolic activity. Results did not show absolute metabolic modulations associated with flexibility performance, but the performance level was related to the direction of metabolic modulation in the IPL with opposite patterns in young and older individuals. The individual inhibitory–excitatory balance modulation showed an inverse relationship with the local BOLD response in the IPL. Finally, the modulation of inhibitory–excitatory balance in IPL was related to whole-brain effects only in older individuals. These findings show disparities in the metabolic mechanisms underlying cognitive flexibility in young and older adults and their association with the performance level and BOLD response. Such metabolic differences are likely to play a role in executive functioning during aging and specifically in cognitive flexibility.

Funder

Fonds Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek

Excellence of Science, MEMODYN

KU Leuven Research Fund

National Institute of Health

Publisher

Society for Neuroscience

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