Functional interaction of abnormal beta and gamma oscillations on bradykinesia in parkinsonian rats

Bradykinesia, a debilitating symptom characterized by impaired movement initiation and reduced speed in Parkinson’s disease (PD), is associated with abnormal oscillatory activity in the motor cortex-basal ganglia circuit. We investigated the interplay between abnormal beta and gamma oscillations in...

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Veröffentlicht in:Brain research bulletin 2024-04, Vol.209, p.110911-110911, Article 110911
Hauptverfasser: Jiang, Xinxin, Yang, Jian, Wang, Zirui, Jia, Jun, Wang, Gang
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Bradykinesia, a debilitating symptom characterized by impaired movement initiation and reduced speed in Parkinson’s disease (PD), is associated with abnormal oscillatory activity in the motor cortex-basal ganglia circuit. We investigated the interplay between abnormal beta and gamma oscillations in relation to bradykinesia in parkinsonian rats. Our findings showed reduced movement activities in parkinsonian rats, accompanied by enhanced high beta oscillations in the motor cortex, which are closely associated with movement transitional difficulties. Additionally, gamma oscillations correlated with movement velocity in control rats but not in parkinsonian rats. We observed selective coupling between high beta oscillation phase and gamma oscillation amplitude in PD, as well as cortical high beta-broadband gamma phase-amplitude coupling (PAC) negatively influencing locomotor activities in control and PD rats. These findings suggest a collaborative role of cortical beta and gamma oscillations in facilitating movement execution, with beta oscillations being linked to movement initiation and gamma oscillations associated with movement speed. Importantly, the aberrant alterations of these oscillations are closely related to the development of bradykinesia. Furthermore, PAC hold promise as a biomarker for comprehensive assessment of movement performance in PD. •Motor cortical high beta power elevates in both rest and movement states of PD model.•Enhanced high beta activity relates impaired movement initiation in PD model.•Dysregulated gamma activity relates slowed movement speed in PD model.•Gamma power negatively correlates with high beta power in PD model.•High beta - broad gamma PAC is a biomarker for overall movement performance.
ISSN:0361-9230
1873-2747
DOI:10.1016/j.brainresbull.2024.110911