Tau follows principal axes of functional and structural brain organization in Alzheimer's disease.
Julie OttoyMin Su KangJazlynn Xiu Min TanLyndon BooneReinder Vos de WaelBo-Yong ParkGleb BezginFiroza Z LussierTharick A PascoalNesrine RahmouniJenna StevensonJaime Fernandez AriasJoseph TherriaultSeok Jun HongBojana StefanovicJoAnne McLaurinJean-Paul SoucySerge GauthierBoris C BernhardtSandra E BlackPedro Rosa-NetoMaged GoubranPublished in: Nature communications (2024)
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a brain network disorder where pathological proteins accumulate through networks and drive cognitive decline. Yet, the role of network connectivity in facilitating this accumulation remains unclear. Using in-vivo multimodal imaging, we show that the distribution of tau and reactive microglia in humans follows spatial patterns of connectivity variation, the so-called gradients of brain organization. Notably, less distinct connectivity patterns ("gradient contraction") are associated with cognitive decline in regions with greater tau, suggesting an interaction between reduced network differentiation and tau on cognition. Furthermore, by modeling tau in subject-specific gradient space, we demonstrate that tau accumulation in the frontoparietal and temporo-occipital cortices is associated with greater baseline tau within their functionally and structurally connected hubs, respectively. Our work unveils a role for both functional and structural brain organization in pathology accumulation in AD, and supports subject-specific gradient space as a promising tool to map disease progression.