Compression of Cerebellar Functional Gradients in Schizophrenia

Author:

Dong Debo1ORCID,Luo Cheng23,Guell Xavier45,Wang Yulin67,He Hui23,Duan Mingjun2,Eickhoff Simon B89,Yao Dezhong110

Affiliation:

1. The Clinical Hospital of Chengdu Brain Science Institute, MOE Key Lab for Neuroinformation, Center for Information in Medicine, School of Life Science and Technology, University of Electronic Science and Technology of China, Chengdu, China

2. Department of Psychiatry, The Fourth People’s Hospital of Chengdu, Chengdu, China

3. High-Field Magnetic Resonance Brain Imaging Key Laboratory of Sichuan Province, University of Electronic Science and Technology of China, Chengdu, China

4. McGovern Institute for Brain Research, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA

5. Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA

6. Faculty of Psychological and Educational Sciences, Department of Experimental and Applied Psychology, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Brussels, Belgium

7. Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, Department of Data Analysis, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium

8. Institute for Systems Neuroscience, Medical Faculty, Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf, Düsseldorf, Germany

9. Institute of Neuroscience and Medicine, Brain & Behaviour (INM-7), Research Centre Jülich, Jülich, Germany

10. Research Unit of NeuroInformation, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Chengdu, China

Abstract

Abstract Our understanding of cerebellar involvement in brain disorders has evolved from motor processing to high-level cognitive and affective processing. Recent neuroscience progress has highlighted hierarchy as a fundamental principle for the brain organization. Despite substantial research on cerebellar dysfunction in schizophrenia, there is a need to establish a neurobiological framework to better understand the co-occurrence and interaction of low- and high-level functional abnormalities of cerebellum in schizophrenia. To help to establish such a framework, we investigated the abnormalities in the distribution of sensorimotor-supramodal hierarchical processing topography in the cerebellum and cerebellar-cerebral circuits in schizophrenia using a novel gradient-based resting-state functional connectivity (FC) analysis (96 patients with schizophrenia vs 120 healthy controls). We found schizophrenia patients showed a compression of the principal motor-to-supramodal gradient. Specifically, there were increased gradient values in sensorimotor regions and decreased gradient values in supramodal regions, resulting in a shorter distance (compression) between the sensorimotor and supramodal poles of this gradient. This pattern was observed in intra-cerebellar, cerebellar-cerebral, and cerebral-cerebellar FC. Further investigation revealed hyper-connectivity between sensorimotor and cognition areas within cerebellum, between cerebellar sensorimotor and cerebral cognition areas, and between cerebellar cognition and cerebral sensorimotor areas, possibly contributing to the observed compressed pattern. These findings present a novel mechanism that may underlie the co-occurrence and interaction of low- and high-level functional abnormalities of cerebellar and cerebro-cerebellar circuits in schizophrenia. Within this framework of abnormal motor-to-supramodal organization, a cascade of impairments stemming from disrupted low-level sensorimotor system may in part account for high-level cognitive cerebellar dysfunction in schizophrenia.

Funder

National Key Research and Development Program of China

National Natural Science Foundation of China

CAMS Innovation Fund for Medical Sciences

Project of Science and Technology Department of Sichuan Province

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health

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