The Biological Basis of Network Control Theory in Brain Dynamics

Summary: Researchers have identified a correlation between control energy consumption and glucose metabolism in temporal lobe epilepsy. The mechanism provides a biological basis for the application of network control theory in the study of brain dynamics.

Source: USTC

A team led by researcher He Xiaosong from the University of Science and Technology (USTC) revealed the correlation between control energy consumption and glucose metabolism in temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE), providing the biological basis for the application of network control theory (NCT) in the study of brain dynamics.

This work was published in Science Advances on November 9.

Understanding the mechanism of neural dynamics in various different brain regions has been a major focus in neuroscience. In recent years, NCT, a theory that originates in engineering, has been widely used to estimate the control energy in the dynamic processes in the brain by modeling the transitions of different brain states.

The control energy originally referred to the energy input required to change the state of the system. However, when it comes to brain dynamics, the biological counterpart of such energy input remains unknown, which raises questions about the application of NCT.

Based on a comparison between the brain structures of TLE patients and healthy controls, the team simulated two representative brain dynamic processes and calculated the control energy consumed in these processes.

This shows a brain
Understanding the mechanism of neural dynamics in various different brain regions has been a major focus in neuroscience. Image is in the public domain

The results showed that patients with TLE required significantly higher global optimal control energy (OCE) than healthy controls to activate the limbic network compared to healthy controls.

The abnormal energetic efficiency is consistent with the lateralization of the seizure focus, which implies that the seven limbic brain regions ipsilateral to the seizure focus consume more control energy to maintain brain dynamics.

Using positron emission tomography, the team confirmed that the baseline glucose metabolism levels in these brain regions are inversely correlated with the consumption level of control energy, which means that lower baseline metabolism requires more energy to obtain the same level of activation.

A decline in baseline regional metabolism arose from the loss of structural integrity, especially in the hippocampus, and eventually led to higher energy costs for maintaining brain dynamics.

The team delivered a unified framework for the correlations between the structural integrity of brains, the baseline glucose metabolism and the control energy required to maintain brain dynamics. By providing a potential biological explanation of control energy, this work lays the foundation for further NCT applications in neuroscience.

About this neuroscience research news

Author: Press Office
Source: USTC
Contact: Press Office – USTC
Image: The image is in the public domain

Original Research: Open access.
Uncovering the biological basis of control energy: Structural and metabolic correlates of energy inefficiency in temporal lobe epilepsy” by He Xiaosong et al. Science Advances


Abstract

Uncovering the biological basis of control energy: Structural and metabolic correlates of energy inefficiency in temporal lobe epilepsy

Network control theory is increasingly used to profile the brain’s energy landscape via simulations of neural dynamics.

This approach estimates the control energy required to simulate the activation of brain circuits based on structural connectome measured using diffusion magnetic resonance imaging, thereby quantifying those circuits’ energetic efficiency. The biological basis of control energy, however, remains unknown, hampering its further application.

To fill this gap, investigating temporal lobe epilepsy as a lesion model, we show that patients require higher control energy to activate the limbic network than healthy volunteers, especially ipsilateral to the seizure focus.

The energetic imbalance between ipsilateral and contralateral temporolimbic regions is tracked by asymmetric patterns of glucose metabolism measured using positron emission tomography, which, in turn, may be selectively explained by asymmetric gray matter loss as evidenced in the hippocampus.

Our investigation provides the first theoretical framework unifying gray matter integrity, metabolism, and energetic generation of neural dynamics.

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