20 results on '"Pasvanis S"'
Search Results
2. Family history and APOE4 risk for Alzheimer’s Disease impact the neural correlates of episodic memory by early midlife
- Author
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Rajah, M. N., primary, Wallace, L. M. K., additional, Ankudowich, E., additional, Yu, E. H., additional, Swierkot, A., additional, Patel, R., additional, Chakravarty, M. M., additional, Naumova, D., additional, Pruessner, J., additional, Joober, R., additional, Gauthier, S., additional, and Pasvanis, S., additional
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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3. Family history and APOE4 risk for Alzheimer's disease impact the neural correlates of episodic memory by early midlife
- Author
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Rajah, M.N., primary, Wallace, L.M.K., additional, Ankudowich, E., additional, Yu, E.H., additional, Swierkot, A., additional, Patel, R., additional, Chakravarty, M.M., additional, Naumova, D., additional, Pruessner, J., additional, Joober, R., additional, Gauthier, S., additional, and Pasvanis, S., additional
- Published
- 2017
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4. Changes in the modulation of brain activity during context encoding vs. context retrieval across the adult lifespan
- Author
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Ankudowich, E., primary, Pasvanis, S., additional, and Rajah, M.N., additional
- Published
- 2016
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5. Menopause status- and sex-related differences in age associations with spatial context memory and white matter microstructure at midlife.
- Author
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Lissaman R, Rajagopal S, Kearley J, Pasvanis S, and Rajah MN
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- Humans, Female, Middle Aged, Male, Adult, Postmenopause physiology, Postmenopause psychology, Memory, Episodic, White Matter diagnostic imaging, White Matter pathology, Spatial Memory physiology, Sex Characteristics, Aging pathology, Aging psychology, Aging physiology, Diffusion Tensor Imaging, Menopause physiology, Menopause psychology
- Abstract
Decline in spatial context memory emerges in midlife, the time when most females transition from pre- to post-menopause. Recent evidence suggests that, among post-menopausal females, advanced age is associated with functional brain alterations and lower spatial context memory. However, it is unknown whether similar effects are evident for white matter (WM) and, moreover, whether such effects contribute to sex differences at midlife. To address this, we conducted a study on 96 cognitively unimpaired middle-aged adults (30 males, 32 pre-menopausal females, 34 post-menopausal females). Spatial context memory was assessed using a face-location memory paradigm, while WM microstructure was assessed using diffusion tensor imaging. Behaviorally, advanced age was associated with lower spatial context memory in post-menopausal females but not pre-menopausal females or males. Additionally, advanced age was associated with microstructural variability in predominantly frontal WM (e.g., anterior corona radiata, genu of corpus callosum), which was related to lower spatial context memory among post-menopausal females. Our findings suggest that post-menopausal status enhances vulnerability to age effects on the brain's WM and episodic memory., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest None., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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6. Language diversity across home and work contexts differentially impacts age- and menopause-related declines in cognitive control in healthy females.
- Author
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Duval A, Beatty-Martínez AL, Pasvanis S, Crestol A, Snytte J, Rajah MN, and Titone DA
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- Humans, Female, Middle Aged, Adult, Aged, Young Adult, Multilingualism, Executive Function physiology, Cognitive Dysfunction physiopathology, Language, Workplace, Menopause physiology, Aging physiology, Cognition physiology
- Abstract
Menopause is associated with declines in cognitive control. However, there is individual variability in the slope of this decline. Recent work suggests that indices of cognitive control are mediated by communicative demands of the language environment. However, little is known about how the impact of bilingual experience generalizes across the lifespan, particularly in females who exhibit steeper cognitive decline due to increasing age and menopausal transition. Thus, we investigated whether diversity of language use in distinct communicative contexts modulated the effects of aging and menopause on cognitive control in an adult lifespan sample of healthy females. We performed robust linear regressions on a sample of 120 females (age range 20-65 years) to characterize age- ( n = 120) and menopause-related ( n = 59) declines in cognitive control (as assessed by the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test) and to determine whether they are modulated by different facets of bilingual language experience, including the diversity of language use (i.e., language entropy) in home and workplace environments. Workplace but not home language diversity modulated age- and menopause-related declines in cognitive control, suggesting that females may compensate for decline by virtue of adapting to the externally imposed demands of the language environment. These findings have implications for identifying which aspects of bilingual experience may contribute to cognitive reserve in healthy aging. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2024
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7. Menopause Status and Within-Group Differences in Chronological Age Affect the Functional Neural Correlates of Spatial Context Memory in Middle-Aged Females.
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Crestol A, Rajagopal S, Lissaman R, LaPlume AA, Pasvanis S, Olsen RK, Einstein G, Jacobs EG, and Rajah MN
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- Middle Aged, Humans, Female, Adult, Aged, Child, Preschool, Prefrontal Cortex, Spatial Memory, Menopause, Brain Mapping, Memory Disorders, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Mental Recall, Brain diagnostic imaging, Memory, Episodic
- Abstract
Reductions in the ability to encode and retrieve past experiences in rich spatial contextual detail (episodic memory) are apparent by midlife-a time when most females experience spontaneous menopause. Yet, little is known about how menopause status affects episodic memory-related brain activity at encoding and retrieval in middle-aged premenopausal and postmenopausal females, and whether any observed group differences in brain activity and memory performance correlate with chronological age within group. We conducted an event-related task fMRI study of episodic memory for spatial context to address this knowledge gap. Multivariate behavioral partial least squares was used to investigate how chronological age and retrieval accuracy correlated with brain activity in 31 premenopausal females (age range, 39.55-53.30 years; mean age, 44.28 years; SD age, 3.12 years) and 41 postmenopausal females (age range, 46.70-65.14 years; mean age, 57.56 years; SD age, 3.93 years). We found that postmenopausal status, and advanced age within postmenopause, was associated with lower spatial context memory. The fMRI analysis showed that only in postmenopausal females, advanced age was correlated with decreased activity in occipitotemporal, parahippocampal, and inferior parietal cortices during encoding and retrieval, and poorer spatial context memory performance. In contrast, only premenopausal females exhibited an overlap in encoding and retrieval activity in angular gyrus, midline cortical regions, and prefrontal cortex, which correlated with better spatial context retrieval accuracy. These results highlight how menopause status and chronological age, nested within menopause group, affect episodic memory and its neural correlates at midlife. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT This is the first fMRI study to examine how premenopause and postmenopause status affect the neural correlates of episodic memory encoding and retrieval, and how chronological age contributes to any observed group similarities and differences. We found that both menopause status (endocrine age) and chronological age affect spatial context memory and its neural correlates. Menopause status directly affected the direction of age-related and performance-related correlations with brain activity in inferior parietal, parahippocampal, and occipitotemporal cortices across encoding and retrieval. Moreover, we found that only premenopausal females exhibited cortical reinstatement of encoding-related activity in midline cortical, prefrontal, and angular gyrus, at retrieval. This suggests that spatial context memory abilities may rely on distinct brain systems at premenopause compared with postmenopause., (Copyright © 2023 the authors.)
- Published
- 2023
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8. Sex differences in longitudinal changes of episodic memory-related brain activity and cognition in cognitively unimpaired older adults with a family history of Alzheimer's disease.
- Author
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Samson AD, Rajagopal S, Pasvanis S, Villeneuve S, McIntosh AR, and Rajah MN
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- Humans, Male, Female, Aged, Sex Characteristics, Cognition, Temporal Lobe, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Neuropsychological Tests, Alzheimer Disease diagnostic imaging, Alzheimer Disease genetics, Memory, Episodic, Neurodegenerative Diseases
- Abstract
Episodic memory decline is an early symptom of Alzheimer's disease (AD) - a neurodegenerative disease that has a higher prevalence rate in older females compared to older males. However, little is known about why these sex differences in prevalence rate exist. In the current longitudinal task fMRI study, we explored whether there were sex differences in the patterns of memory decline and brain activity during object-location (spatial context) encoding and retrieval in a large sample of cognitively unimpaired older adults from the Pre-symptomatic Evaluation of Novel or Experimental Treatments for Alzheimer's Disease (PREVENT-AD) program who are at heightened risk of developing AD due to having a family history (+FH) of the disease. The goal of the study was to gain insight into whether there are sex differences in the neural correlates of episodic memory decline, which may advance knowledge about sex-specific patterns in the natural progression to AD. Our results indicate that +FH females performed better than +FH males at both baseline and follow-up on neuropsychological and task fMRI measures of episodic memory. Moreover, multivariate data-driven task fMRI analysis identified generalized patterns of longitudinal decline in medial temporal lobe activity that was paralleled by longitudinal increases in lateral prefrontal cortex, caudate and midline cortical activity during successful episodic retrieval and novelty detection in +FH males, but not females. Post-hoc analyses indicated that higher education had a stronger effect on +FH females neuropsychological scores compared to +FH males. We conclude that higher educational attainment may have a greater neuroprotective effect in older +FH females compared to +FH males., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Crown Copyright © 2023. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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9. Sex differences in the relationship between age, performance, and BOLD signal variability during spatial context memory processing.
- Author
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Wang H, Burles F, Subramaniapillai S, Pasvanis S, Rajah MN, and Protzner AB
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- Aged, Brain diagnostic imaging, Female, Humans, Male, Sex Characteristics, Spatial Memory, Brain Mapping, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods
- Abstract
Recent work suggests that the relationship between age and memory-related brain activity are different for men and women. We sought to extend this work by examining sex differences in the association between age, memory performance, and brain signal variability during context memory tasks in neurotypical adults (aged 19-76 years; N = 128, 87 women). We measured blood oxygen level-dependent standard deviation (BOLD SD) during encoding and retrieval in easy and difficult spatial context memory tasks and investigated sex-specific, age- and performance-associated BOLD SD patterns. Behavioral analysis revealed age-related decreases in memory retrieval, but no sex differences nor an age-by-sex interaction. Imaging results indicated that both sexes showed a negative correlation between BOLD SD and retrieval accuracy in memory-related regions. We also identified significant sex differences: women exhibited age-associated increases in BOLD SD which were negatively associated with performance. Men exhibited both age-associated decreases and increases, which were not related to performance. Our results revealed sex differences in the relationship between age and BOLD SD during high-demand episodic memory tasks., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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10. Age- and Episodic Memory-related Differences in Task-based Functional Connectivity in Women and Men.
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Subramaniapillai S, Rajagopal S, Ankudowich E, Pasvanis S, Misic B, and Rajah MN
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- Adult, Aging psychology, Brain diagnostic imaging, Brain Mapping, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Neural Pathways diagnostic imaging, Memory, Episodic
- Abstract
Aging is associated with episodic memory decline and changes in functional brain connectivity. Understanding whether and how biological sex influences age- and memory performance-related functional connectivity has important theoretical implications for the cognitive neuroscience of memory and aging. Here, we scanned 161 healthy adults between 19 and 76 years of age in an event-related fMRI study of face-location spatial context memory. Adults were scanned while performing easy and difficult versions of the task at both encoding and retrieval. We used multivariate whole-brain partial least squares connectivity to test the hypothesis that there are sex differences in age- and episodic memory performance-related functional connectivity. We examined how individual differences in age and retrieval accuracy correlated with task-related connectivity. We then repeated this analysis after disaggregating the data by self-reported sex. We found that increased encoding and retrieval-related connectivity within the dorsal attention network (DAN), and between DAN and frontoparietal network and visual networks, were positively correlated to retrieval accuracy and negatively correlated with age in both sexes. We also observed sex differences in age- and performance-related functional connectivity: (a) Greater between-networks integration was apparent at both levels of task difficulty in women only, and (b) increased DAN-default mode network connectivity with age was observed in men and was correlated with poorer memory performance. Therefore, the neural correlates of age-related episodic memory decline differ in women and men and have important theoretical and clinical implications for the cognitive neuroscience of memory, aging, and dementia prevention., (© 2022 Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Published under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) license.)
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- 2022
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11. Generalization of memory-related brain function in asymptomatic older women with a family history of late onset Alzheimer's Disease: Results from the PREVENT-AD Cohort.
- Author
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Rabipour S, Rajagopal S, Pasvanis S, and Rajah MN
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- Aged, Alzheimer Disease diagnostic imaging, Alzheimer Disease genetics, Alzheimer Disease psychology, Apolipoproteins E genetics, Brain diagnostic imaging, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Sex Characteristics, Alzheimer Disease physiopathology, Asymptomatic Diseases, Brain physiopathology, Cognition, Memory, Episodic
- Abstract
Late-onset Alzheimer's disease (AD) disproportionately affects women compared to men. Episodic memory decline is one of the earliest and most pronounced deficits observed in AD. However, it remains unclear whether sex influences episodic memory-related brain function in cognitively intact older adults at risk of developing AD. Here we used task-based multivariate partial least squares analysis to examine sex differences in episodic memory-related brain activity and brain activity-behavior correlations in a matched sample of cognitively intact older women and men with a family history of AD from the PREVENT-AD cohort study in Montreal, Canada (M
age =63.03±3.78; Meducation =15.41±3.40). We observed sex differences in task-related brain activity and brain activity-behavior correlations during the encoding of object-location associative memories and object-only item memory, and the retrieval of object only item memories. Our findings suggest a generalization of episodic memory-related brain activation and performance in women compared to men. Follow up analyses should test for sex differences in the relationship between brain activity patterns and performance longitudinally, in association with risk factors for AD development. This article is part of the Virtual Special Issue titled COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE OF HEALTHY AND PATHOLOGICAL AGING. The full issue can be found on ScienceDirect at https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/neurobiology-of-aging/special-issue/105379XPWJP., (Crown Copyright © 2021. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2021
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12. The ratio of posterior-anterior medial temporal lobe volumes predicts source memory performance in healthy young adults.
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Snytte J, Elshiekh A, Subramaniapillai S, Manning L, Pasvanis S, Devenyi GA, Olsen RK, and Rajah MN
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- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Forecasting, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Male, Memory physiology, Organ Size physiology, Photic Stimulation methods, Young Adult, Memory, Episodic, Mental Recall physiology, Psychomotor Performance physiology, Temporal Lobe diagnostic imaging, Temporal Lobe physiology
- Abstract
A functional gradient has been proposed across the medial temporal lobes (MTL) such that the anterior MTL is thought to support processing of individual items (e.g., item memory and complex object perception), whereas the posterior MTL is thought to support item-context retrieval (e.g., source memory). Whereas functional imaging studies have provided evidence supporting this anatomical organization, results from structural analyses remain inconclusive. The current study examined the relationship between volume of MTL regions of interest (ROIs), and performance on a source memory task and a fine-grain complex object perception task, in healthy young adults (mean age = 21.5, range = 18-29). Using a semiautomated procedure, we segmented the parahippocampal and perirhinal cortices (PHC, PRC), posteromedial and anterolateral entorhinal cortices (pmERC, alERC), and posterior and anterior hippocampus (postHC, antHC) on high-resolution T2-weighted MRIs. Regional volumes were computed as proportions of intracranial volume, and as posterior-anterior volumetric ratios (PHC:PRC, pmERC:alERC, postHC:antHC). Partial-least squares regressions were applied to predict source and item memory, and perceptual discrimination accuracy, based on ROI and ratio volumes. In our ROI regressions, we found that postHC volume was positively correlated with a latent factor predicting source memory, and PRC and antHC volumes were negatively correlated to this latent factor. In our ratio regressions, we observed an effect relating the posterior-anterior distribution of gray matter across the MTL with source memory. Our results demonstrate differential associations between anterior and posterior MTL and source memory performance. Findings from this study highlight the importance of considering patterns of structure-behavior associations in the neurobiology of episodic memory., (© 2020 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2020
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13. The association between cognitive reserve and performance-related brain activity during episodic encoding and retrieval across the adult lifespan.
- Author
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Elshiekh A, Subramaniapillai S, Rajagopal S, Pasvanis S, Ankudowich E, and Rajah MN
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- Adult, Brain diagnostic imaging, Brain Mapping, Humans, Longevity, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Mental Recall, Neuropsychological Tests, Cognitive Reserve, Memory, Episodic
- Abstract
Remembering associations between encoded items and their contextual setting is a feature of episodic memory. Although this ability generally deteriorates with age, there is substantial variability in how older individuals perform on episodic memory tasks. A current topic of debate in the cognitive neuroscience of aging literature revolves around whether this variability may stem from genetic and/or environmental factors related to reserve, allowing some individuals to compensate for age-related decline through differential recruitment of brain regions. In this fMRI study spanning a large adult lifespan sample (N = 154), we tested whether higher cognitive reserve was associated with better task-fMRI context memory performance, and functional compensatory activity patterns in the aging brain. We used multivariate Behaviour Partial Least Squares (B-PLS) analysis to examine how age, retrieval accuracy, and a proxy measure of cognitive reserve [i.e., a composite score consisting of years of education (EDU) and crystallized IQ], impacted brain activity during the encoding and retrieval of spatial and temporal contextual details. The results indicated that age-related increases in encoding activity within anterior and lateral frontal, inferior parietal, occipito-temporal and medial temporal cortices, was correlated with better subsequent memory performance; and may be indicative of age-related functional compensation at encoding. Interestingly this compensatory pattern was not correlated with our proxy measure of cognitive reserve but was associated with total brain volume (a measure of brain reserve). However, cognitive reserve was associated with age-invariant and task-general activity in superior temporal, occipital, and left inferior frontal regions. We conclude that the relationship between cognitive reserve, brain reserve and age-related functional compensation is complex, and that EDU and IQ may not fully account for individual differences in cognitive reserve when studying well educated, healthy aging cohorts., (Crown Copyright © 2020. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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14. APOE4 Status is Related to Differences in Memory-Related Brain Function in Asymptomatic Older Adults with Family History of Alzheimer's Disease: Baseline Analysis of the PREVENT-AD Task Functional MRI Dataset.
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Rabipour S, Rajagopal S, Yu E, Pasvanis S, Lafaille-Magnan ME, Breitner J, and Rajah MN
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- Aged, Alzheimer Disease epidemiology, Asymptomatic Diseases epidemiology, Brain physiology, Cohort Studies, Data Interpretation, Statistical, Databases, Factual statistics & numerical data, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Male, Mental Recall physiology, Middle Aged, Quebec epidemiology, Alzheimer Disease diagnostic imaging, Alzheimer Disease genetics, Apolipoprotein E4 genetics, Brain diagnostic imaging, Medical History Taking statistics & numerical data, Memory, Episodic
- Abstract
Background: Episodic memory decline is one of the earliest symptoms of late-onset Alzheimer's disease (AD). Older adults with the apolipoprotein E ɛ4 (+APOE4) genetic risk factor for AD may exhibit altered patterns of memory-related brain activity years prior to initial symptom onset., Objective: Here we report the baseline episodic memory task functional MRI results from the PRe-symptomatic EValuation of Experimental or Novel Treatments for Alzheimer's Disease cohort in Montreal, Canada, in which 327 healthy older adults were scanned within 15 years of their parent's conversion to AD., Methods: Volunteers were scanned as they encoded and retrieved object-location spatial source associations. The task was designed to discriminate between brain activity related to spatial source recollection and object-only (recognition) memory. We used multivariate partial least squares (PLS) to test the hypothesis that +APOE4 adults with family history of AD would exhibit altered patterns of brain activity in the recollection-related memory network, comprised of medial frontal, parietal, and medial temporal cortices, compared to APOE4 non-carriers (-APOE4). We also examined group differences in the correlation between event-related brain activity and memory performance., Results: We found group similarities in memory performance and in task-related brain activity in the recollection network, but differences in brain activity-behavior correlations in ventral occipito-temporal, medial temporal, and medial prefrontal cortices during episodic encoding., Conclusion: These findings are consistent with previous literature on the influence of APOE4 on brain activity and provide new perspective on potential gene-based differences in brain-behavior relationships in people with first-degree family history of AD.
- Published
- 2020
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15. Sex Differences in the Neural Correlates of Spatial Context Memory Decline in Healthy Aging.
- Author
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Subramaniapillai S, Rajagopal S, Elshiekh A, Pasvanis S, Ankudowich E, and Rajah MN
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- Adult, Aged, Cross-Sectional Studies, Face, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Memory, Episodic, Mental Recall, Middle Aged, Neuropsychological Tests, Young Adult, Aging psychology, Cerebral Cortex physiology, Parahippocampal Gyrus physiology, Sex Characteristics, Spatial Memory physiology
- Abstract
Aging is associated with episodic memory decline and alterations in memory-related brain function. However, it remains unclear if age-related memory decline is associated with similar patterns of brain aging in women and men. In the current task fMRI study, we tested the hypothesis that there are sex differences in the effect of age and memory performance on brain activity during episodic encoding and retrieval of face-location associations (spatial context memory). Forty-one women and 41 men between the ages of 21 and 76 years participated in this study. Between-group multivariate partial least squares analysis of the fMRI data was conducted to directly test for sex differences and similarities in age-related and performance-related patterns of brain activity. Our behavioral analysis indicated no significant sex differences in retrieval accuracy on the fMRI tasks. In relation to performance effects, we observed similarities and differences in how retrieval accuracy related to brain activity in women and men. Both sexes activated dorsal and lateral PFC, inferior parietal cortex, and left parahippocampal gyrus at encoding, and this supported subsequent memory performance. However, there were sex differences in retrieval activity in these same regions and in lateral occipital-temporal and ventrolateral PFC. In relation to age effects, we observed sex differences in the effect of age on memory-related activity within PFC, inferior parietal cortex, parahippocampal gyrus, and lateral occipital-temporal cortices. Overall, our findings suggest that the neural correlates of age-related spatial context memory decline differ in women compared with men.
- Published
- 2019
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16. Age-related differences in prefrontal-hippocampal connectivity are associated with reduced spatial context memory.
- Author
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Ankudowich E, Pasvanis S, and Rajah MN
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- Adult, Aged, Brain Mapping, Female, Hippocampus diagnostic imaging, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Memory, Episodic, Temporal Lobe diagnostic imaging, Young Adult, Aging physiology, Mental Recall physiology, Prefrontal Cortex diagnostic imaging, Spatial Memory physiology
- Abstract
Altered functional connectivity between dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC), posterior hippocampus (HC) and other brain regions with advanced age may contribute to age-related differences in episodic memory. In the current fMRI study of spatial context memory, we used seed connectivity analysis to test for age-related differences in the correlations between activity in DLPFC and HC seeds, and the rest of the brain, in an adult life span sample. In young adults, we found that connectivity between right DLPFC and other prefrontal cortex regions, parietal cortex, precuneus, and ventral visual cortices during encoding was positively related to performance. Positive seed connectivity among these regions, and negative connectivity with posterior HC at retrieval was also positively correlated with retrieval accuracy in young adults. In older adults, activity in right DLPFC was positively correlated with activity in this same set of brain regions, and with posterior HC during encoding and retrieval. Interestingly, this pattern of seed connectivity in older adults was negatively correlated with retrieval accuracy. Thus, age-related differences in context memory may be related to altered frontal-parietal and visual cortical interactions with posterior HC. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2019
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17. Context Memory Decline in Middle Aged Adults is Related to Changes in Prefrontal Cortex Function.
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Kwon D, Maillet D, Pasvanis S, Ankudowich E, Grady CL, and Rajah MN
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- Adult, Brain Mapping, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Mental Status Schedule, Middle Aged, Neuropsychological Tests, Reaction Time, Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted, Young Adult, Aging physiology, Aging psychology, Memory physiology, Memory Disorders physiopathology, Prefrontal Cortex physiopathology
- Abstract
The ability to encode and retrieve spatial and temporal contextual details of episodic memories (context memory) begins to decline at midlife. In the current study, event-related fMRI was used to investigate the neural correlates of context memory decline in healthy middle aged adults (MA) compared with young adults (YA). Participants were scanned while performing easy and hard versions of spatial and temporal context memory tasks. Scans were obtained at encoding and retrieval. Significant reductions in context memory retrieval accuracy were observed in MA, compared with YA. The fMRI results revealed that overall, both groups exhibited similar patterns of brain activity in parahippocampal cortex, ventral occipito-temporal regions and prefrontal cortex (PFC) during encoding. In contrast, at retrieval, there were group differences in ventral occipito-temporal and PFC activity, due to these regions being more activated in MA, compared with YA. Furthermore, only in YA, increased encoding activity in ventrolateral PFC, and increased retrieval activity in occipital cortex, predicted increased retrieval accuracy. In MA, increased retrieval activity in anterior PFC predicted increased retrieval accuracy. These results suggest that there are changes in PFC contributions to context memory at midlife., (© The Author 2015. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2016
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18. High sodium butyrate levels induce MDR1 activation in colorectal cells: Impact of 15-deoxy-Δ(12,14)-prostaglandin J(2) on the resistance to saquinavir.
- Author
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Pasvanis S, Tremblay S, and Dumais N
- Subjects
- ATP Binding Cassette Transporter, Subfamily B, ATP Binding Cassette Transporter, Subfamily B, Member 1 genetics, Caco-2 Cells, Humans, Intestinal Mucosa metabolism, Prostaglandin D2 metabolism, Transcription, Genetic drug effects, ATP Binding Cassette Transporter, Subfamily B, Member 1 biosynthesis, Butyrates pharmacology, Drug Resistance, Viral, HIV Protease Inhibitors pharmacology, Intestinal Mucosa drug effects, Prostaglandin D2 analogs & derivatives, Saquinavir pharmacology
- Abstract
The bioavailability of HIV protease inhibitors is altered by P-glycoproteins (P-gp). The aim of this study was to elucidate the impact of sodium butyrate (NaBut), a unique product of the bacterial fermentation found in elevated concentrations in AIDS patients on P-gp expression. As prostaglandin production is upregulated under inflammatory conditions, we determined the role of 15-deoxy-Δ(12,14)-prostaglandin J(2) (15d-PGJ(2)) in the NaBut-induced P-gp functionality in colonic epithelial cells. Treatment with NaBut significantly increased MDR1 transcription and P-gp expression on the surface of both types of cells. Nevertheless, the addition of 15d-PGJ(2) to NaBut-stimulated cells significantly upregulated MDR1 mRNA expression and P-gp expression and functionality, leading to an important diminution of saquinavir accumulation by these cells. Our data provide evidence that both NaBut and prostaglandins may profoundly affect the intracellular accumulation of saquinavir in AIDS patients with compromised colonic walls., (Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2012
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19. CCR7-specific migration to CCL19 and CCL21 is induced by PGE(2) stimulation in human monocytes: Involvement of EP(2)/EP(4) receptors activation.
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Côté SC, Pasvanis S, Bounou S, and Dumais N
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- Blotting, Western, Cell Line, Tumor, Cells, Cultured, Cyclic AMP metabolism, Cyclic AMP-Dependent Protein Kinases metabolism, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Flow Cytometry, Gene Expression drug effects, Humans, Monocytes cytology, Monocytes metabolism, Nuclear Proteins metabolism, Promoter Regions, Genetic genetics, Protein Binding drug effects, Receptors, CCR7 genetics, Receptors, Prostaglandin E metabolism, Receptors, Prostaglandin E, EP2 Subtype, Receptors, Prostaglandin E, EP4 Subtype, Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction, Time Factors, Cell Movement drug effects, Chemokine CCL19 metabolism, Chemokine CCL21 metabolism, Dinoprostone pharmacology, Monocytes drug effects, Receptors, CCR7 metabolism
- Abstract
The recent demonstration that newly recruited monocytes do not die at the site of inflammation, but migrate to draining lymph nodes, raises the question on the mechanism involved in this process. In this study, we demonstrate for the first time that prostaglandin E(2) (PGE(2)) regulates the expression and the activity of CCR7 in human blood-isolated monocytes as well as in the MONO-MAC-1 cell lineage. PGE(2) induces intracellular cAMP formation through engagement of the E-prostanoid 2/E-prostanoid 4 (EP(2)/EP(4)) receptors present on monocytes. Migration to chemokines CCL19 and CCL21 in the PGE(2)-stimulated monocytes is mediated through the augmentation of cAMP concentration and furthermore, the cAMP/PKA pathway appears to act as the major inducer of CCR7 transcription in MONO-MAC-1. While p38 MAPK was induced by PGE(2), we observed that PGE(2) can downregulate p42/p44 MAPK phosphorylation. At the transcription level, inhibition of p38 MAPK inhibits CCR7 mRNA expression. Finally, we demonstrated that transcription factors CREB-1 and C/EBPalpha and C/EBPbeta are translocated to the nucleus following PGE(2) stimulation and bind the potent CCR7 promoter region. Our findings may have important implication for HIV-1 migration to the lymph nodes since macrophages and monocytes, particularly CD16 positive subset, are susceptible to HIV-1 infection.
- Published
- 2009
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20. PGJ2 antagonizes NF-kappaB-induced HIV-1 LTR activation in colonic epithelial cells.
- Author
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Boisvert M, Côté S, Vargas A, Pasvanis S, Bounou S, Barbeau B, and Dumais N
- Subjects
- Caco-2 Cells, Colon cytology, Epithelial Cells metabolism, HIV Long Terminal Repeat physiology, HIV-1 genetics, Humans, Luciferases biosynthesis, NF-kappa B metabolism, Prostaglandin D2 pharmacology, Epithelial Cells virology, HIV Long Terminal Repeat drug effects, HIV-1 physiology, NF-kappa B antagonists & inhibitors, Prostaglandin D2 analogs & derivatives
- Abstract
Intestinal epithelial cells play an important role in early stages of HIV-1 infection and long-term persistence of the virus. Here we determined the mechanism that regulates HIV-1 activation via prostaglandin J(2) (PGJ(2)) in Caco-2 cells. We showed that treatment of Caco-2 cells with PGJ(2) decreased the infectivity of a luciferase reporter virus, pHXB-luc, as well as HIV production following infection of cells with a X4-tropic virus by antagonizing sodium butyrate, a cellular activator known to induce HIV-1 transcription. Transfection of intestinal epithelial cells such as Caco-2, HT-29 and SW620 cells with full-length HIV-1 LTR (pLTR-luc) revealed that PGJ(2) reduced HIV-1 LTR-mediated reporter gene activity. The involvement of NF-kappaB in the PGJ(2)-dependent down-regulation of HIV-1 transcription was further assessed using the kappaB-regulated luciferase-encoding vectors. In Caco-2 cells, PGJ(2) decreased IKK activity, resulting in reduced NF-kappaB translocation to the nucleus. Since sodium butyrate has been associated with a chronic stress response in AIDS patients, our results suggest that addition of PGJ(2) in the environment of infected intestinal epithelial cells could reduce HIV-1 transcription.
- Published
- 2008
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