Nature Communications (Sep 2023)

Patient-specific models link neurotransmitter receptor mechanisms with motor and visuospatial axes of Parkinson’s disease

  • Ahmed Faraz Khan,
  • Quadri Adewale,
  • Sue-Jin Lin,
  • Tobias R. Baumeister,
  • Yashar Zeighami,
  • Felix Carbonell,
  • Nicola Palomero-Gallagher,
  • Yasser Iturria-Medina

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-41677-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 17

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Parkinson’s disease involves multiple neurotransmitter systems beyond the classical dopaminergic circuit, but their influence on structural and functional alterations is not well understood. Here, we use patient-specific causal brain modeling to identify latent neurotransmitter receptor-mediated mechanisms contributing to Parkinson’s disease progression. Combining the spatial distribution of 15 receptors from post-mortem autoradiography with 6 neuroimaging-derived pathological factors, we detect a diverse set of receptors influencing gray matter atrophy, functional activity dysregulation, microstructural degeneration, and dendrite and dopaminergic transporter loss. Inter-individual variability in receptor mechanisms correlates with symptom severity along two distinct axes, representing motor and psychomotor symptoms with large GABAergic and glutamatergic contributions, and cholinergically-dominant visuospatial, psychiatric and memory dysfunction. Our work demonstrates that receptor architecture helps explain multi-factorial brain re-organization, and suggests that distinct, co-existing receptor-mediated processes underlie Parkinson’s disease.