Validation of ketamine as a pharmacological model of thalamic dysconnectivity across the illness course of schizophrenia

Author:

Abram Samantha V.,Roach Brian J.,Fryer Susanna L.,Calhoun Vince D.,Preda Adrian,van Erp Theo G. M.,Bustillo Juan R.ORCID,Lim Kelvin O.ORCID,Loewy Rachel L.,Stuart Barbara K.,Krystal John H.ORCID,Ford Judith M.ORCID,Mathalon Daniel H.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractN-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDAR) hypofunction is a leading pathophysiological model of schizophrenia. Resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rsfMRI) studies demonstrate a thalamic dysconnectivity pattern in schizophrenia involving excessive connectivity with sensory regions and deficient connectivity with frontal, cerebellar, and thalamic regions. The NMDAR antagonist ketamine, when administered at sub-anesthetic doses to healthy volunteers, induces transient schizophrenia-like symptoms and alters rsfMRI thalamic connectivity. However, the extent to which ketamine-induced thalamic dysconnectivity resembles schizophrenia thalamic dysconnectivity has not been directly tested. The current double-blind, placebo-controlled study derived an NMDAR hypofunction model of thalamic dysconnectivity from healthy volunteers undergoing ketamine infusions during rsfMRI. To assess whether ketamine-induced thalamic dysconnectivity was mediated by excess glutamate release, we tested whether pre-treatment with lamotrigine, a glutamate release inhibitor, attenuated ketamine’s effects. Ketamine produced robust thalamo-cortical hyper-connectivity with sensory and motor regions that was not reduced by lamotrigine pre-treatment. To test whether the ketamine thalamic dysconnectivity pattern resembled the schizophrenia pattern, a whole-brain template representing ketamine’s thalamic dysconnectivity effect was correlated with individual participant rsfMRI thalamic dysconnectivity maps, generating “ketamine similarity coefficients” for people with chronic (SZ) and early illness (ESZ) schizophrenia, individuals at clinical high-risk for psychosis (CHR-P), and healthy controls (HC). Similarity coefficients were higher in SZ and ESZ than in HC, with CHR-P showing an intermediate trend. Higher ketamine similarity coefficients correlated with greater hallucination severity in SZ. Thus, NMDAR hypofunction, modeled with ketamine, reproduces the thalamic hyper-connectivity observed in schizophrenia across its illness course, including the CHR-P period preceding psychosis onset, and may contribute to hallucination severity.

Funder

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | National Institutes of Health

North Carolina GlaxoSmithKline Foundation

U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | National Institute of Mental Health

MIRECC Advanced Schizophrenia Fellowship

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | Office of Extramural Research, National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Psychiatry and Mental health,Molecular Biology

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