Regional distribution and maturation of tau pathology among phenotypic variants of Alzheimer’s disease
Acta Neuropathologica, ISSN: 1432-0533, Vol: 144, Issue: 6, Page: 1103-1116
2022
- 10Citations
- 29Captures
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Regional distribution and maturation of tau pathology among phenotypic variants of Alzheimer's disease.
Acta Neuropathol. 2022 Jul 23; Authors: Arezoumandan S, Xie SX, Cousins KA, Mechanic-Hamilton DJ, Peterson CS, Huang CY, Ohm DT, Ittyerah R, McMillan CT, Wolk DA, Yushkevich P, Trojanowski JQ, Lee EB, Grossman M, Phillips JS, Irwin DJ PubMed: 35871112 Submit Comment
Article Description
Alzheimer’s disease neuropathologic change (ADNC) is clinically heterogenous and can present with a classic multidomain amnestic syndrome or focal non-amnestic syndromes. Here, we investigated the distribution and burden of phosphorylated and C-terminally cleaved tau pathologies across hippocampal subfields and cortical regions among phenotypic variants of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). In this study, autopsy-confirmed patients with ADNC, were classified into amnestic (aAD, N = 40) and non-amnestic (naAD, N = 39) groups based on clinical criteria. We performed digital assessment of tissue sections immunostained for phosphorylated-tau (AT8 detects pretangles and mature tangles), D-truncated tau (TauC3, a marker for mature tangles and ghost tangles), and E-truncated tau (MN423, a marker that primarily detects ghost tangles), in hippocampal subfields and three cortical regions. Linear mixed-effect models were used to test regional and group differences while adjusting for demographics. Both groups showed AT8-reactivity across hippocampal subfields that mirrored traditional Braak staging with higher burden of phosphorylated-tau in subregions implicated as affected early in Braak staging. The burden of phosphorylated-tau and TauC3-immunoreactive tau in the hippocampus was largely similar between the aAD and naAD groups. In contrast, the naAD group had lower relative distribution of MN423-reactive tangles in CA1 (β = − 0.2, SE = 0.09, p = 0.001) and CA2 (β = − 0.25, SE = 0.09, p = 0.005) compared to the aAD. While the two groups had similar levels of phosphorylated-tau pathology in cortical regions, there was higher burden of TauC3 reactivity in sup/mid temporal cortex (β = 0.16, SE = 0.07, p = 0.02) and MN423 reactivity in all cortical regions (β = 0.4–0.43, SE = 0.09, p < 0.001) in the naAD compared to aAD. In conclusion, AD clinical variants may have a signature distribution of overall phosphorylated-tau pathology within the hippocampus reflecting traditional Braak staging; however, non-amnestic AD has greater relative mature tangle pathology in the neocortex compared to patients with clinical amnestic AD, where the hippocampus had greatest relative burden of C-terminally cleaved tau reactivity. Thus, varying neuronal susceptibility to tau-mediated neurodegeneration may influence the clinical expression of ADNC.
Bibliographic Details
http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85135089937&origin=inward; http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00401-022-02472-x; http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35871112; https://link.springer.com/10.1007/s00401-022-02472-x; https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00401-022-02472-x; https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00401-022-02472-x
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