Motor reorganization in asymptomatic carriers of a single mutant Parkin allele: a human model for presymptomatic parkinsonism.

Standard

Motor reorganization in asymptomatic carriers of a single mutant Parkin allele: a human model for presymptomatic parkinsonism. / Buhmann, Carsten; Binkofski, F; Klein, C; Büchel, C; van Eimeren, T; Erdmann, C; Hedrich, K; Kasten, M; Hagenah, J; Deuschl, G; Pramstaller, P P; Siebner, H R.

In: BRAIN, Vol. 128, No. 10, 10, 2005, p. 2281-2290.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Buhmann, C, Binkofski, F, Klein, C, Büchel, C, van Eimeren, T, Erdmann, C, Hedrich, K, Kasten, M, Hagenah, J, Deuschl, G, Pramstaller, PP & Siebner, HR 2005, 'Motor reorganization in asymptomatic carriers of a single mutant Parkin allele: a human model for presymptomatic parkinsonism.', BRAIN, vol. 128, no. 10, 10, pp. 2281-2290. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15947065?dopt=Citation>

APA

Buhmann, C., Binkofski, F., Klein, C., Büchel, C., van Eimeren, T., Erdmann, C., Hedrich, K., Kasten, M., Hagenah, J., Deuschl, G., Pramstaller, P. P., & Siebner, H. R. (2005). Motor reorganization in asymptomatic carriers of a single mutant Parkin allele: a human model for presymptomatic parkinsonism. BRAIN, 128(10), 2281-2290. [10]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15947065?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Buhmann C, Binkofski F, Klein C, Büchel C, van Eimeren T, Erdmann C et al. Motor reorganization in asymptomatic carriers of a single mutant Parkin allele: a human model for presymptomatic parkinsonism. BRAIN. 2005;128(10):2281-2290. 10.

Bibtex

@article{1baad66ca1cd42e8aadfc5ea384d6d53,
title = "Motor reorganization in asymptomatic carriers of a single mutant Parkin allele: a human model for presymptomatic parkinsonism.",
abstract = "Mutations in the Parkin gene are the most common known single cause of early-onset parkinsonism. It has been shown that asymptomatic carriers with a single mutant allele have latent presynaptic dopaminergic dysfunction in the striatum. Here we used functional MRI to map movement-related neuronal activity during internally selected or externally determined finger movements in 12 asymptomatic carriers of a Parkin mutation and 12 healthy non-carriers. Mean response times were 63 ms shorter during internally selected movements than during externally guided movements (P = 0.003). There were no differences in mean response times between groups (P > 0.2). Compared with externally determined movements, the internal selection of movements led to a stronger activation of rostral motor areas, including the rostral cingulate motor area (rCMA), rostral supplementary motor area, medial and dorsolateral prefrontal cortices. The genotype had a significant impact on movement-related activation patterns. Asymptomatic carriers showed a stronger increase in movement-related activity in the right rCMA and left dorsal premotor cortex, but only if movements relied on internal cues. In addition, synaptic activity in the rCMA had a stronger influence on activity in the basal ganglia in the context of internally selected movements in asymptomatic carriers relative to non-carriers. We infer that this reorganization of striatocortical motor loops reflects a compensatory effort to overcome latent nigrostriatal dysfunction.",
author = "Carsten Buhmann and F Binkofski and C Klein and C B{\"u}chel and {van Eimeren}, T and C Erdmann and K Hedrich and M Kasten and J Hagenah and G Deuschl and Pramstaller, {P P} and Siebner, {H R}",
year = "2005",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "128",
pages = "2281--2290",
journal = "BRAIN",
issn = "0006-8950",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",
number = "10",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Motor reorganization in asymptomatic carriers of a single mutant Parkin allele: a human model for presymptomatic parkinsonism.

AU - Buhmann, Carsten

AU - Binkofski, F

AU - Klein, C

AU - Büchel, C

AU - van Eimeren, T

AU - Erdmann, C

AU - Hedrich, K

AU - Kasten, M

AU - Hagenah, J

AU - Deuschl, G

AU - Pramstaller, P P

AU - Siebner, H R

PY - 2005

Y1 - 2005

N2 - Mutations in the Parkin gene are the most common known single cause of early-onset parkinsonism. It has been shown that asymptomatic carriers with a single mutant allele have latent presynaptic dopaminergic dysfunction in the striatum. Here we used functional MRI to map movement-related neuronal activity during internally selected or externally determined finger movements in 12 asymptomatic carriers of a Parkin mutation and 12 healthy non-carriers. Mean response times were 63 ms shorter during internally selected movements than during externally guided movements (P = 0.003). There were no differences in mean response times between groups (P > 0.2). Compared with externally determined movements, the internal selection of movements led to a stronger activation of rostral motor areas, including the rostral cingulate motor area (rCMA), rostral supplementary motor area, medial and dorsolateral prefrontal cortices. The genotype had a significant impact on movement-related activation patterns. Asymptomatic carriers showed a stronger increase in movement-related activity in the right rCMA and left dorsal premotor cortex, but only if movements relied on internal cues. In addition, synaptic activity in the rCMA had a stronger influence on activity in the basal ganglia in the context of internally selected movements in asymptomatic carriers relative to non-carriers. We infer that this reorganization of striatocortical motor loops reflects a compensatory effort to overcome latent nigrostriatal dysfunction.

AB - Mutations in the Parkin gene are the most common known single cause of early-onset parkinsonism. It has been shown that asymptomatic carriers with a single mutant allele have latent presynaptic dopaminergic dysfunction in the striatum. Here we used functional MRI to map movement-related neuronal activity during internally selected or externally determined finger movements in 12 asymptomatic carriers of a Parkin mutation and 12 healthy non-carriers. Mean response times were 63 ms shorter during internally selected movements than during externally guided movements (P = 0.003). There were no differences in mean response times between groups (P > 0.2). Compared with externally determined movements, the internal selection of movements led to a stronger activation of rostral motor areas, including the rostral cingulate motor area (rCMA), rostral supplementary motor area, medial and dorsolateral prefrontal cortices. The genotype had a significant impact on movement-related activation patterns. Asymptomatic carriers showed a stronger increase in movement-related activity in the right rCMA and left dorsal premotor cortex, but only if movements relied on internal cues. In addition, synaptic activity in the rCMA had a stronger influence on activity in the basal ganglia in the context of internally selected movements in asymptomatic carriers relative to non-carriers. We infer that this reorganization of striatocortical motor loops reflects a compensatory effort to overcome latent nigrostriatal dysfunction.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 128

SP - 2281

EP - 2290

JO - BRAIN

JF - BRAIN

SN - 0006-8950

IS - 10

M1 - 10

ER -