Network structure and transcriptomic vulnerability shape atrophy in frontotemporal dementia.
Golia ShafieiVincent BazinetMahsa DadarAna L ManeraLars Lau RaketAlain DagherBarbara BorroniJoaquín CastillaFermin MorenoRobert LaforceCaroline GraffMatthis SynofzikDaniela GalimbertiJames B RoweMario MasellisMaria Carmela TartagliaElizabeth FingerRik VandenbergheAlexandre de MendonçaFabrizio TagliaviniIsabel SantanaChris ButlerAlex GerhardAdrian DanekJohannes LevinMarkus OttoSandro SorbiEsther Van Den BergHarro SeelaarJohn C van SwietenJonathan D RohrerBratislav MišićSimon Ducharmenull nullnull nullPublished in: Brain : a journal of neurology (2022)
Connections among brain regions allow pathological perturbations to spread from a single source region to multiple regions. Patterns of neurodegeneration in multiple diseases, including behavioral variant of frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD), resemble the large-scale functional systems, but how bvFTD-related atrophy patterns relate to structural network organization remains unknown. Here we investigate whether neurodegeneration patterns in sporadic and genetic bvFTD are conditioned by connectome architecture. Regional atrophy patterns were estimated in both genetic bvFTD (75 patients, 247 controls) and sporadic bvFTD (70 patients, 123 controls). We first identify distributed atrophy patterns in bvFTD, mainly targeting areas associated with the limbic intrinsic network and insular cytoarchitectonic class. Regional atrophy was significantly correlated with atrophy of structurally- and functionally- connected neighbors, demonstrating that network structure shapes atrophy patterns. The anterior insula was identified as the predominant group epicenter of brain atrophy using data-driven and simulation-based methods, with some secondary regions in frontal ventromedial and antero-medial temporal areas. Finally, we find that FTD-related genes, namely C9orf72 and TARDBP, confer local transcriptomic vulnerability to the disease, modulating the propagation of pathology through the connectome. Collectively, our results demonstrate that atrophy patterns in sporadic and genetic bvFTD are jointly shaped by global connectome architecture and local transcriptomic vulnerability, providing an explanation as to how heterogenous pathological entities can lead to the same clinical syndrome.