A longitudinal investigation of the cerebellum in adulthood: anatomical and network changes, motor function, and cognition

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R01 · $53,511 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Project Summary The project summary here is adapted from that of the parent grant R01AG064010-01. Understanding the factors that contribute to declines in both motor and cognitive performance is crucial for helping older individuals maintain their quality of life and independence. Further, a better understanding of the patterns of normative age-related change is necessary in order to pinpoint diverging trajectories that may be indicative of pathology. Understanding sex differences is also of great importance as older women are disproportionately impacted by Alzheimer’s disease, suffer from more falls, and are more frail than older men. While research investigating the cerebral cortex has expanded our understanding of aging, cerebellar contributions have been overlooked. The cerebellum makes up 10% of the total brain volume, includes more than half of all the neurons in the brain, and is an especially good target for intervention via non-invasive brain stimulation. Further, it contributes to both motor and cognitive function, and shows sex differences in volume in older adults, that may be due in part to hormonal changes with menopause. In the limited work investigating the aging cerebellum, its volumetric declines are second only to those of the hippocampus. Thus, including the cerebellum in models of brain and behavioral change represents an innovative way to improve understanding of age-related performance declines, and may in fact do a better job than the cortex alone. Preliminary findings indicate that cerebellar declines may begin during middle age, and that the structure is associated with motor and cognitive performance in cross-sectional investigations of aging. Here, an expert team of cerebellar, aging, and sex difference researchers will recruit a group of 150 healthy adults over the age of 35 (75 males, 75 females) for a 2-year longitudinal study of the cerebellum and behavior in middle age and older adulthood. The objective of this proposal is to quantify regional cerebellar volume, cerebello-thalamo-cortical networks, and motor and cognitive function to investigate cerebellar and behavioral trajectories. Aim 1 will quantify changes over time in cerebellar structure and networks to define these trajectories across adulthood and in aging. Aim 2 is designed to investigate brain-behavior relationships and determine how cerebellar changes relate to motor and cognitive performance declines. Aim 3 will explore sex differences in cerebellar and behavioral trajectories, with a focus on the influence of menopausal hormonal changes. The expected results stand to have a significant impact on our understanding of the aging mind and brain and improve our models of brain and behavioral change in adulthood. Investigating cerebellar trajectories will expand our knowledge of healthy aging and stands to provide new targets of investigation with respect to age-related diseases, including Alzheimer’s. The proposed supplement will support Mr. Ivan Herrejo...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10629848
Project number
3R01AG064010-04S1
Recipient
TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY
Principal Investigator
Jessica Ann Bernard
Activity code
R01
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2022
Award amount
$53,511
Award type
3
Project period
2019-09-01 → 2024-05-31