Focal acetylcholinergic modulation of the human midcingulo‐insular network during attention: Meta‐analytic neuroimaging and behavioral evidence

Author:

Chakraborty Sudesna1234ORCID,Lee Sun Kyun45,Arnold Sarah M.46,Haast Roy A. M.47,Khan Ali R.234,Schmitz Taylor W.3489ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Neuroscience Graduate Program Western University London Ontario Canada

2. Department of Medical Biophysics Western University London Ontario Canada

3. Robarts Research Institute Western University London Ontario Canada

4. Western Institute for Neuroscience Western University London Ontario Canada

5. Faculty of Dentistry University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

6. Department of Chemical Engineering McMaster University Hamilton Ontario Canada

7. CRMBM, CNRS UMR 7339 Aix‐Marseille University Marseille France

8. Department of Physiology and Pharmacology Western University London Ontario Canada

9. Lawson Health Research Institute London Ontario Canada

Abstract

AbstractThe basal forebrain cholinergic neurons provide acetylcholine to the cortex via large projections. Recent molecular imaging work in humans indicates that the cortical cholinergic innervation is not uniformly distributed, but rather may disproportionately innervate cortical areas relevant to supervisory attention. In this study, we therefore reexamined the spatial relationship between acetylcholinergic modulation and attention in the human cortex using meta‐analytic strategies targeting both pharmacological and non‐pharmacological neuroimaging studies. We found that pharmaco‐modulation of acetylcholine evoked both increased activity in the anterior cingulate and decreased activity in the opercular and insular cortex. In large independent meta‐analyses of non‐pharmacological neuroimaging research, we demonstrate that during attentional engagement these cortical areas exhibit (1) task‐related co‐activation with the basal forebrain, (2) task‐related co‐activation with one another, and (3) spatial overlap with dense cholinergic innervations originating from the basal forebrain, as estimated by multimodal positron emission tomography and magnetic resonance imaging. Finally, we provide meta‐analytic evidence that pharmaco‐modulation of acetylcholine also induces a speeding of responses to targets with no apparent tradeoff in accuracy. In sum, we demonstrate in humans that acetylcholinergic modulation of midcingulo‐insular hubs of the ventral attention/salience network via basal forebrain afferents may coordinate selection of task relevant information, thereby facilitating cognition and behavior.image

Funder

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Biochemistry

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