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APOE ε4 associates with microglial activation independently of Aβ plaques and tau tangles.

João Pedro Ferrari-SouzaFiroza Z LussierDouglas Teixeira LeffaJoseph TherriaultCécile TissotBruna BellaverPamela Cristina Lukasewicz FerreiraMaura MalpettiYi-Ting WangGuilherme PovalaAndréa L BenedetNicholas J AshtonMira ChamounStijn ServaesGleb BezginMin Su KangJenna StevensonNesrine RahmouniVanessa PallenNina Margherita PoltronettiJohn Tiernan O'BrienJames Benedict RoweAnn D CohenOscar L LopezDana L TudorascuJonathan M SchottWilliam E KlunkVictor L VillemagneJean-Paul SoucySerge GauthierDiogo O SouzaHenrik ZetterbergKaj BlennowEduardo R ZimmerPedro Rosa-NetoTharick Ali Pascoal
Published in: Science advances (2023)
Animal studies suggest that the apolipoprotein E ε4 ( APOE ε4) allele is a culprit of early microglial activation in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Here, we tested the association between APOE ε4 status and microglial activation in living individuals across the aging and AD spectrum. We studied 118 individuals with positron emission tomography for amyloid-β (Aβ; [ 18 F]AZD4694), tau ([ 18 F]MK6240), and microglial activation ([ 11 C]PBR28). We found that APOE ε4 carriers presented increased microglial activation relative to noncarriers in early Braak stage regions within the medial temporal cortex accounting for Aβ and tau deposition. Furthermore, microglial activation mediated the Aβ-independent effects of APOE ε4 on tau accumulation, which was further associated with neurodegeneration and clinical impairment. The physiological distribution of APOE mRNA expression predicted the patterns of APOE ε4-related microglial activation in our population, suggesting that APOE gene expression may regulate the local vulnerability to neuroinflammation. Our results support that the APOE ε4 genotype exerts Aβ-independent effects on AD pathogenesis by activating microglia in brain regions associated with early tau deposition.
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