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Compromised Grid-Cell-like Representations in Old Age as a Key Mechanism to Explain Age-Related Navigational Deficits

Authors :
Karin Huber
Claus Tempelmann
Matthias Stangl
Johannes Achtzehn
Thomas Wolbers
Caroline Dietrich
Source :
Current Biology, Current biology 28(7), 1108-1115.e6 (2018). doi:10.1016/j.cub.2018.02.038
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Cell Press, 2018.

Abstract

Summary A progressive loss of navigational abilities in old age has been observed in numerous studies, but we have only limited understanding of the neural mechanisms underlying this decline [1]. A central component of the brain’s navigation circuit are grid cells in entorhinal cortex [2], largely thought to support intrinsic self-motion-related computations, such as path integration (i.e., keeping track of one’s position by integrating self-motion cues) [3, 4, 5, 6]. Given that entorhinal cortex is particularly vulnerable to neurodegenerative processes during aging and Alzheimer’s disease [7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14], deficits in grid cell function could be a key mechanism to explain age-related navigational decline. To test this hypothesis, we conducted two experiments in healthy young and older adults. First, in an fMRI experiment, we found significantly reduced grid-cell-like representations in entorhinal cortex of older adults. Second, in a behavioral path integration experiment, older adults showed deficits in computations of self-position during path integration based on body-based or visual self-motion cues. Most strikingly, we found that these path integration deficits in older adults could be explained by their individual magnitudes of grid-cell-like representations, as reduced grid-cell-like representations were associated with larger path integration errors. Together, these results show that grid-cell-like representations in entorhinal cortex are compromised in healthy aging. Furthermore, the association between grid-cell-like representations and path integration performance in old age supports the notion that grid cells underlie path integration processes. We therefore conclude that impaired grid cell function may play a key role in age-related decline of specific higher-order cognitive functions, such as spatial navigation.<br />Highlights • Grid-cell-like representations in human entorhinal cortex are compromised in old age • This effect is predominantly driven by a lack of representational stability over time • Path integration ability in old age is associated with grid-cell-like representations<br />Stangl et al. found that human grid-cell-like representations are compromised in old age and that reduced magnitudes of grid-cell-like representations are predictive of age-related path integration deficits. Impaired grid cell function, therefore, may provide a mechanistic explanation for a decline of navigational functions in old age.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18790445 and 09609822
Volume :
28
Issue :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Current Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....43ae4b0a21fff4e06616dc0ded57a2f6