Microglial activation and tau propagate jointly across Braak stages.
Tharick Ali PascoalAndréa L BenedetNicholas J AshtonMin Su KangJoseph TherriaultMira ChamounMelissa SavardFiroza Z LussierCécile TissotThomas K KarikariJulie OttoySulantha MathotaarachchiJenna StevensonGassan MassarwehMichael SchöllMony J de LeonJean-Paul SoucyPaul EdisonKaj BlennowHenrik ZetterbergSerge GauthierPedro Rosa-NetoPublished in: Nature medicine (2021)
Compelling experimental evidence suggests that microglial activation is involved in the spread of tau tangles over the neocortex in Alzheimer's disease (AD). We tested the hypothesis that the spatial propagation of microglial activation and tau accumulation colocalize in a Braak-like pattern in the living human brain. We studied 130 individuals across the aging and AD clinical spectrum with positron emission tomography brain imaging for microglial activation ([11C]PBR28), amyloid-β (Aβ) ([18F]AZD4694) and tau ([18F]MK-6240) pathologies. We further assessed microglial triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells 2 (TREM2) cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) concentrations and brain gene expression patterns. We found that [11C]PBR28 correlated with CSF soluble TREM2 and showed regional distribution resembling TREM2 gene expression. Network analysis revealed that microglial activation and tau correlated hierarchically with each other following Braak-like stages. Regression analysis revealed that the longitudinal tau propagation pathways depended on the baseline microglia network rather than the tau network circuits. The co-occurrence of Aβ, tau and microglia abnormalities was the strongest predictor of cognitive impairment in our study population. Our findings support a model where an interaction between Aβ and activated microglia sets the pace for tau spread across Braak stages.
Keyphrases
- cerebrospinal fluid
- inflammatory response
- gene expression
- neuropathic pain
- lipopolysaccharide induced
- lps induced
- positron emission tomography
- network analysis
- computed tomography
- cognitive impairment
- spinal cord
- dna methylation
- single cell
- white matter
- high resolution
- acute myeloid leukemia
- oxidative stress
- induced apoptosis
- cell death
- multiple sclerosis
- pet imaging
- cell proliferation
- resting state
- signaling pathway
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- pet ct
- binding protein
- cross sectional
- cognitive decline
- functional connectivity
- cerebral ischemia
- mass spectrometry