ePoster

A CONSERVED LOCUS COERULEUS FMRI SIGNATURE OF BRAIN-STATE TRANSITIONS ACROSS SLEEP, ANESTHESIA, AND WAKEFULNESS

Francesca Barcelliniand 7 co-authors

University of Geneva

FENS Forum 2026 (2026)
Barcelona, Spain
Board PS03-08AM-338

Presentation

Date TBA

Board: PS03-08AM-338

Poster preview

A CONSERVED LOCUS COERULEUS FMRI SIGNATURE OF BRAIN-STATE TRANSITIONS ACROSS SLEEP, ANESTHESIA, AND WAKEFULNESS poster preview

Event Information

Poster Board

PS03-08AM-338

Abstract

Neuromodulatory systems dynamically reconfigure large-scale brain networks to support adaptation across behavioral and cognitive states. The locus coeruleus (LC), which broadcasts noradrenaline throughout the forebrain, is a central regulator of arousal and state-dependent dynamics. Yet how LC activity reshapes brain-wide organization across physiological contexts, and how it influences resting-state functional MRI (rs-fMRI) connectivity, remains unclear.
Here we use an optogenetically-informed, cross-species framework to define an LC fMRI signature under causal control in mice and test its generalizability across progressively naturalistic conditions. We first derive a low-dimensional spatiotemporal signature from optogenetic LC stimulation that captures a stereotyped sequence of brain-wide BOLD responses. We then track its expression across progressively naturalistic conditions, from endogenous LC calcium surges during simultaneous fiber photometry–fMRI in urethane-anesthetized mice, to spontaneous sleep–wake transitions in mice and humans, and during awake human rs-fMRI at 7T.
Across datasets, the LC-derived signature re-emerges with conserved spatial structure and state-dependent timing, leaving an imprint on the BOLD signal during arousal fluctuations and sleep-stage transitions. Critically, the prevalence of LC events systematically biases functional connectivity metrics in human fMRI, indicating that LC-driven state dynamics systematically shape rs-fMRI connectivity metrics.
These findings establish LC activity as a mechanistically interpretable source of variability in resting-state measurements. As the field advances toward precision medicine with rs-fMRI biomarkers, accounting for LC-related network dynamics may refine the interpretation of functional connectivity differences across individuals and patient populations and provide a quantitative index of arousal and state regulation.

Top: Conceptual overview of the translational framework. An optogenetically defined LC fMRI signature is first derived under controlled LC stimulation in mice, then tracked during endogenous LC fluctuations under urethane anesthesia, during spontaneous sleep–wake transitions in mice, during polysomnography-defined sleep–wake transitions in humans, and during phasic LC events in awake human resting-state fMRI. Middle: Optogenetic LC stimulation in mice yields a low-dimensional, two-component LC signature extracted by SVD (MapLC1 and MapLC2), with corresponding ROI-wise weights (bar plots) and spatial maps (SVD-derived MapLC1/MapLC2). The signature is then transferred to humans using a cross-species homology mapping and expressed as homologous human-space maps. Bottom: Example readouts of LC-signature expression quantified by spatial regression (“map projection”) onto fMRI data. Left: During endogenous LC fluctuations under urethane anesthesia, MapLC1/MapLC2 expression tracks LC photometry and shows a stereotyped event-locked response around LC surges (time 0, dashed line). Middle-left: In mice, MapLC1/MapLC2 expression is systematically modulated across NREM→Wake and Wake→NREM transitions. Middle-right: In humans, the homologous LC maps show analogous modulation across sleep–wake transitions. Right: In awake human rest, LC-dominant bursts are accompanied by time-locked increases in LC-map expression; inter-individual differences in overall LC-signature expression strength (RMS magnitude across time) predict global functional connectivity strength (scatter; line indicates linear fit). Shaded bands indicate ±SEM where applicable; dashed vertical lines mark event onset.

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