Uncovering atrophy progression pattern and mechanisms in individuals at risk of Alzheimer's disease.

IF 4.1 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Brain communications Pub Date : 2025-03-04 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1093/braincomms/fcaf099
Christina Tremblay, Shady Rahayel, Alexandre Pastor-Bernier, Frédéric St-Onge, Andrew Vo, François Rheault, Véronique Daneault, Filip Morys, Natasha Rajah, Sylvia Villeneuve, Alain Dagher
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Alzheimer's disease is associated with pre-symptomatic changes in brain morphometry and accumulation of abnormal tau and amyloid-beta pathology. Studying the development of brain changes prior to symptoms onset may lead to early diagnostic biomarkers and a better understanding of Alzheimer's disease pathophysiology. Alzheimer's disease pathology is thought to arise from a combination of protein accumulation and spreading via neural connections, but how these processes influence brain atrophy progression in the pre-symptomatic phases remains unclear. Individuals with a family history of Alzheimer's disease (FHAD) have an elevated risk of Alzheimer's disease, providing an opportunity to study the pre-symptomatic phase. Here, we used structural MRI from three databases (Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative, Pre-symptomatic Evaluation of Experimental or Novel Treatments for Alzheimer Disease and Montreal Adult Lifespan Study) to map atrophy progression in FHAD and Alzheimer's disease and assess the constraining effects of structural connectivity on atrophy progression. Cross-sectional and longitudinal data up to 4 years were used to perform atrophy progression analysis in FHAD and Alzheimer's disease compared with controls. PET radiotracers were also used to quantify the distribution of abnormal tau and amyloid-beta protein isoforms at baseline. We first derived cortical atrophy progression maps using deformation-based morphometry from 153 FHAD, 156 Alzheimer's disease and 116 controls with similar age, education and sex at baseline. We next examined the spatial relationship between atrophy progression and spatial patterns of tau aggregates and amyloid-beta plaques deposition, structural connectivity and neurotransmitter receptor and transporter distributions. Our results show that there were similar patterns of atrophy progression in FHAD and Alzheimer's disease, notably in the cingulate, temporal and parietal cortices, with more widespread and severe atrophy in Alzheimer's disease. Both tau and amyloid-beta pathology tended to accumulate in regions that were structurally connected in FHAD and Alzheimer's disease. The pattern of atrophy and its progression also aligned with existing structural connectivity in FHAD. In Alzheimer's disease, our findings suggest that atrophy progression results from pathology propagation that occurred earlier, on a previously intact connectome. Moreover, a relationship was found between serotonin receptor spatial distribution and atrophy progression in Alzheimer's disease. The current study demonstrates that regions showing atrophy progression in FHAD and Alzheimer's disease present with specific connectivity and cellular characteristics, uncovering some of the mechanisms involved in pre-clinical and clinical neurodegeneration.

揭示阿尔茨海默病风险个体的萎缩进展模式和机制。
阿尔茨海默病与症状前大脑形态改变和异常tau蛋白和β淀粉样蛋白病理积累有关。在症状出现之前研究大脑变化的发展可能会导致早期诊断生物标志物和更好地了解阿尔茨海默病的病理生理。阿尔茨海默病的病理被认为是由蛋白质积累和通过神经连接扩散的组合引起的,但这些过程如何影响症状前阶段的脑萎缩进展尚不清楚。有阿尔茨海默病家族史(FHAD)的个体患阿尔茨海默病的风险较高,这为研究症状前阶段提供了机会。在这里,我们使用来自三个数据库(阿尔茨海默病神经影像学倡议,阿尔茨海默病实验性或新型治疗的症状前评估和蒙特利尔成人寿命研究)的结构MRI来绘制FHAD和阿尔茨海默病的萎缩进展,并评估结构连接对萎缩进展的约束作用。与对照组相比,使用长达4年的横断面和纵向数据对FHAD和阿尔茨海默病进行萎缩进展分析。PET放射性示踪剂也用于量化基线时异常tau和淀粉样蛋白亚型的分布。我们首先使用基于变形的形态测定法从153名FHAD患者、156名阿尔茨海默病患者和116名基线年龄、教育程度和性别相似的对照组中获得皮质萎缩进展图。接下来,我们研究了萎缩进展与tau聚集体和淀粉样斑块沉积的空间模式、结构连通性和神经递质受体和转运体分布之间的空间关系。我们的研究结果表明,FHAD和阿尔茨海默病的萎缩进展模式相似,尤其是在扣带皮层、颞叶皮层和顶叶皮层,阿尔茨海默病的萎缩更为广泛和严重。tau蛋白和β淀粉样蛋白病理都倾向于在FHAD和阿尔茨海默病的结构连接区域积累。萎缩的模式及其进展也与FHAD中现有的结构连通性一致。在阿尔茨海默病中,我们的研究结果表明,萎缩进展是由于先前完整的连接体上发生的病理增殖更早。此外,还发现了血清素受体空间分布与阿尔茨海默病萎缩进展之间的关系。目前的研究表明,FHAD和阿尔茨海默病中表现出萎缩进展的区域存在特定的连通性和细胞特征,揭示了临床前和临床神经变性的一些机制。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
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