Cholinergic mesencephalic neurons are involved in gait and postural disorders in Parkinson disease

Carine Karachi(Inserm), David Grabli(Sorbonne Université), Frédéric Bernard(Institut du Cerveau), Dominique Tandé(Institut du Cerveau), Nicolas Wattiez(Institut du Cerveau), Hayat Belaïd(Sorbonne Université), Éric Bardinet(Cognitive Neuroimaging Lab), Annick Prigent(Institut du Cerveau), Hans‐Peter Nothacker(University of California, Irvine), Stéphane Hunot(Institut du Cerveau), Andréas Hartmann(Institut du Cerveau), Stéphane Lehéricy(Institut du Cerveau), Étienne C. Hirsch(Immunologie et Neurogénétique Expérimentales et Moléculaires), Chantal François(Institut du Cerveau)
Journal of Clinical Investigation
July 13, 2010
Cited by 418Open Access
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Abstract

Gait disorders and postural instability, which are commonly observed in elderly patients with Parkinson disease (PD), respond poorly to dopaminergic agents used to treat other parkinsonian symptoms. The brain structures underlying gait disorders and falls in PD and aging remain to be characterized. Using functional MRI in healthy human subjects, we have shown here that activity of the mesencephalic locomotor region (MLR), which is composed of the pedunculopontine nucleus (PPN) and the adjacent cuneiform nucleus, was modulated by the speed of imagined gait, with faster imagined gait activating a discrete cluster within the MLR. Furthermore, the presence of gait disorders in patients with PD and in aged monkeys rendered parkinsonian by MPTP intoxication correlated with loss of PPN cholinergic neurons. Bilateral lesioning of the cholinergic part of the PPN induced gait and postural deficits in nondopaminergic lesioned monkeys. Our data therefore reveal that the cholinergic neurons of the PPN play a central role in controlling gait and posture and represent a possible target for pharmacological treatment of gait disorders in PD.


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