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Amyloid pathology but not APOE ε4 status is permissive for tau-related hippocampal dysfunction

We investigated whether the impact of tau-pathology on memory performance and on hippocampal/medial temporal memory function in non-demented individuals depends on the presence of amyloid pathology, irrespective of diagnostic clinical stage. We conducted a cross-sectional analysis of the observation...

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Autores principales: Düzel, Emrah, Ziegler, Gabriel, Berron, David, Maass, Anne, Schütze, Hartmut, Cardenas-Blanco, Arturo, Glanz, Wenzel, Metzger, Coraline, Dobisch, Laura, Reuter, Martin, Spottke, Annika, Brosseron, Frederic, Fliessbach, Klaus, Heneka, Michael T, Laske, Christoph, Peters, Oliver, Priller, Josef, Spruth, Eike Jakob, Ramirez, Alfredo, Speck, Oliver, Schneider, Anja, Teipel, Stefan, Kilimann, Ingo, Jens, Wiltfang, Schott, Björn-Hendrik, Preis, Lukas, Gref, Daria, Maier, Franziska, Munk, Matthias H, Roy, Nina, Ballarini, Tomasso, Yakupov, Renat, Haynes, John Dylan, Dechent, Peter, Scheffler, Klaus, Wagner, Michael, Jessen, Frank
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9128811/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35352105
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awab405
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author Düzel, Emrah
Ziegler, Gabriel
Berron, David
Maass, Anne
Schütze, Hartmut
Cardenas-Blanco, Arturo
Glanz, Wenzel
Metzger, Coraline
Dobisch, Laura
Reuter, Martin
Spottke, Annika
Brosseron, Frederic
Fliessbach, Klaus
Heneka, Michael T
Laske, Christoph
Peters, Oliver
Priller, Josef
Spruth, Eike Jakob
Ramirez, Alfredo
Speck, Oliver
Schneider, Anja
Teipel, Stefan
Kilimann, Ingo
Jens, Wiltfang
Schott, Björn-Hendrik
Preis, Lukas
Gref, Daria
Maier, Franziska
Munk, Matthias H
Roy, Nina
Ballarini, Tomasso
Yakupov, Renat
Haynes, John Dylan
Dechent, Peter
Scheffler, Klaus
Wagner, Michael
Jessen, Frank
author_facet Düzel, Emrah
Ziegler, Gabriel
Berron, David
Maass, Anne
Schütze, Hartmut
Cardenas-Blanco, Arturo
Glanz, Wenzel
Metzger, Coraline
Dobisch, Laura
Reuter, Martin
Spottke, Annika
Brosseron, Frederic
Fliessbach, Klaus
Heneka, Michael T
Laske, Christoph
Peters, Oliver
Priller, Josef
Spruth, Eike Jakob
Ramirez, Alfredo
Speck, Oliver
Schneider, Anja
Teipel, Stefan
Kilimann, Ingo
Jens, Wiltfang
Schott, Björn-Hendrik
Preis, Lukas
Gref, Daria
Maier, Franziska
Munk, Matthias H
Roy, Nina
Ballarini, Tomasso
Yakupov, Renat
Haynes, John Dylan
Dechent, Peter
Scheffler, Klaus
Wagner, Michael
Jessen, Frank
author_sort Düzel, Emrah
collection PubMed
description We investigated whether the impact of tau-pathology on memory performance and on hippocampal/medial temporal memory function in non-demented individuals depends on the presence of amyloid pathology, irrespective of diagnostic clinical stage. We conducted a cross-sectional analysis of the observational, multicentric DZNE-Longitudinal Cognitive Impairment and Dementia Study (DELCODE). Two hundred and thirty-five participants completed task functional MRI and provided CSF (92 cognitively unimpaired, 100 experiencing subjective cognitive decline and 43 with mild cognitive impairment). Presence (A+) and absence (A−) of amyloid pathology was defined by CSF amyloid-β(42) (Aβ42) levels. Free recall performance in the Free and Cued Selective Reminding Test, scene recognition memory accuracy and hippocampal/medial temporal functional MRI novelty responses to scene images were related to CSF total-tau and phospho-tau levels separately for A+ and A− individuals. We found that total-tau and phospho-tau levels were negatively associated with memory performance in both tasks and with novelty responses in the hippocampus and amygdala, in interaction with Aβ42 levels. Subgroup analyses showed that these relationships were only present in A+ and remained stable when very high levels of tau (>700 pg/ml) and phospho-tau (>100 pg/ml) were excluded. These relationships were significant with diagnosis, age, education, sex, assessment site and Aβ42 levels as covariates. They also remained significant after propensity score based matching of phospho-tau levels across A+ and A− groups. After classifying this matched sample for phospho-tau pathology (T−/T+), individuals with A+/T+ were significantly more memory-impaired than A−/T+ despite the fact that both groups had the same amount of phospho-tau pathology. ApoE status (presence of the E4 allele), a known genetic risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease, did not mediate the relationship between tau pathology and hippocampal function and memory performance. Thus, our data show that the presence of amyloid pathology is associated with a linear relationship between tau pathology, hippocampal dysfunction and memory impairment, although the actual severity of amyloid pathology is uncorrelated. Our data therefore indicate that the presence of amyloid pathology provides a permissive state for tau-related hippocampal dysfunction and hippocampus-dependent recognition and recall impairment. This raises the possibility that in the predementia stage of Alzheimer’s disease, removing the negative impact of amyloid pathology could improve memory and hippocampal function even if the amount of tau-pathology in CSF is not changed, whereas reducing increased CSF tau-pathology in amyloid-negative individuals may not proportionally improve memory function.
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spelling pubmed-91288112022-05-25 Amyloid pathology but not APOE ε4 status is permissive for tau-related hippocampal dysfunction Düzel, Emrah Ziegler, Gabriel Berron, David Maass, Anne Schütze, Hartmut Cardenas-Blanco, Arturo Glanz, Wenzel Metzger, Coraline Dobisch, Laura Reuter, Martin Spottke, Annika Brosseron, Frederic Fliessbach, Klaus Heneka, Michael T Laske, Christoph Peters, Oliver Priller, Josef Spruth, Eike Jakob Ramirez, Alfredo Speck, Oliver Schneider, Anja Teipel, Stefan Kilimann, Ingo Jens, Wiltfang Schott, Björn-Hendrik Preis, Lukas Gref, Daria Maier, Franziska Munk, Matthias H Roy, Nina Ballarini, Tomasso Yakupov, Renat Haynes, John Dylan Dechent, Peter Scheffler, Klaus Wagner, Michael Jessen, Frank Brain Original Article We investigated whether the impact of tau-pathology on memory performance and on hippocampal/medial temporal memory function in non-demented individuals depends on the presence of amyloid pathology, irrespective of diagnostic clinical stage. We conducted a cross-sectional analysis of the observational, multicentric DZNE-Longitudinal Cognitive Impairment and Dementia Study (DELCODE). Two hundred and thirty-five participants completed task functional MRI and provided CSF (92 cognitively unimpaired, 100 experiencing subjective cognitive decline and 43 with mild cognitive impairment). Presence (A+) and absence (A−) of amyloid pathology was defined by CSF amyloid-β(42) (Aβ42) levels. Free recall performance in the Free and Cued Selective Reminding Test, scene recognition memory accuracy and hippocampal/medial temporal functional MRI novelty responses to scene images were related to CSF total-tau and phospho-tau levels separately for A+ and A− individuals. We found that total-tau and phospho-tau levels were negatively associated with memory performance in both tasks and with novelty responses in the hippocampus and amygdala, in interaction with Aβ42 levels. Subgroup analyses showed that these relationships were only present in A+ and remained stable when very high levels of tau (>700 pg/ml) and phospho-tau (>100 pg/ml) were excluded. These relationships were significant with diagnosis, age, education, sex, assessment site and Aβ42 levels as covariates. They also remained significant after propensity score based matching of phospho-tau levels across A+ and A− groups. After classifying this matched sample for phospho-tau pathology (T−/T+), individuals with A+/T+ were significantly more memory-impaired than A−/T+ despite the fact that both groups had the same amount of phospho-tau pathology. ApoE status (presence of the E4 allele), a known genetic risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease, did not mediate the relationship between tau pathology and hippocampal function and memory performance. Thus, our data show that the presence of amyloid pathology is associated with a linear relationship between tau pathology, hippocampal dysfunction and memory impairment, although the actual severity of amyloid pathology is uncorrelated. Our data therefore indicate that the presence of amyloid pathology provides a permissive state for tau-related hippocampal dysfunction and hippocampus-dependent recognition and recall impairment. This raises the possibility that in the predementia stage of Alzheimer’s disease, removing the negative impact of amyloid pathology could improve memory and hippocampal function even if the amount of tau-pathology in CSF is not changed, whereas reducing increased CSF tau-pathology in amyloid-negative individuals may not proportionally improve memory function. Oxford University Press 2022-05-24 /pmc/articles/PMC9128811/ /pubmed/35352105 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awab405 Text en © The Author(s) (2022). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Original Article
Düzel, Emrah
Ziegler, Gabriel
Berron, David
Maass, Anne
Schütze, Hartmut
Cardenas-Blanco, Arturo
Glanz, Wenzel
Metzger, Coraline
Dobisch, Laura
Reuter, Martin
Spottke, Annika
Brosseron, Frederic
Fliessbach, Klaus
Heneka, Michael T
Laske, Christoph
Peters, Oliver
Priller, Josef
Spruth, Eike Jakob
Ramirez, Alfredo
Speck, Oliver
Schneider, Anja
Teipel, Stefan
Kilimann, Ingo
Jens, Wiltfang
Schott, Björn-Hendrik
Preis, Lukas
Gref, Daria
Maier, Franziska
Munk, Matthias H
Roy, Nina
Ballarini, Tomasso
Yakupov, Renat
Haynes, John Dylan
Dechent, Peter
Scheffler, Klaus
Wagner, Michael
Jessen, Frank
Amyloid pathology but not APOE ε4 status is permissive for tau-related hippocampal dysfunction
title Amyloid pathology but not APOE ε4 status is permissive for tau-related hippocampal dysfunction
title_full Amyloid pathology but not APOE ε4 status is permissive for tau-related hippocampal dysfunction
title_fullStr Amyloid pathology but not APOE ε4 status is permissive for tau-related hippocampal dysfunction
title_full_unstemmed Amyloid pathology but not APOE ε4 status is permissive for tau-related hippocampal dysfunction
title_short Amyloid pathology but not APOE ε4 status is permissive for tau-related hippocampal dysfunction
title_sort amyloid pathology but not apoe ε4 status is permissive for tau-related hippocampal dysfunction
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9128811/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35352105
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awab405
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