Alzheimer’s
disease starts in the entorhinal cortex (yellow).
Using
fMRI in mouse (left) and human (right) brains, the researchers provide evidence
that the disease spreads from the entohrinal cortex (yellow) to other cortical
regions (red) — the perirhinal cortex and posterior parietal cortex.
Study
Shows Where Alzheimer’s Starts and How It Spreads
Using
high-resolution functional MRI (fMRI) imaging in patients with Alzheimer’s
disease and in mouse models of the disease, Columbia University Medical Center
(CUMC) Researchers have clarified three fundamental issues about Alzheimer’s:
·
where
it starts,
·
why
it starts there,
·
and
how it spreads.
In
addition to advancing understanding of Alzheimer’s, the findings could improve
early detection of the disease, when drugs may be most effective. The study was
published today in the online edition of the journal Nature Neuroscience.
“It has
been known for years that Alzheimer’s starts in a brain region known as the
entorhinal cortex,” said Co-Senior Author Scott A. Small, MD, Boris and Rose
Katz Professor of Neurology, Professor of radiology, and Director of the
Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center. “But this study is the first to show in
living patients that it begins specifically in the lateral entorhinal cortex,
or LEC. The LEC is considered to be a gateway to the hippocampus, which plays a
key role in the consolidation of long term memory, among other functions. If
the LEC is affected, other aspects of the hippocampus will also be affected.”
The
study also shows that, over time, Alzheimer’s spreads from the LEC directly to
other areas of the cerebral cortex, in particular, the parietal cortex, a brain
region involved in various functions, including spatial orientation and
navigation. The researchers suspect that Alzheimer’s spreads “functionally,”
that is, by compromising the function of neurons in the LEC, which then
compromises the integrity of neurons in adjoining areas.
A third
major finding of the study is that LEC dysfunction occurs when changes in tau
and amyloid precursor protein (APP) co-exist.
“The
LEC is especially vulnerable to Alzheimer’s because it normally accumulates
tau, which sensitizes the LEC to the accumulation of APP. Together, these two
proteins damage neurons in the LEC, setting the stage for Alzheimer’s,” said Co-Senior
Author, Karen E. Duff, PhD, Professor of Pathology and Cell Biology (in
psychiatry and in the Taub Institute for Research on Alzheimer’s Disease and
the Aging Brain) at CUMC and at the New York State Psychiatric Institute.
In the
study, the researchers used a high-resolution variant of fMRI to map metabolic
defects in the brains of 96 adults enrolled in the Washington Heights-Inwood
Columbia Aging Project (WHICAP). All of
the adults were free of dementia at the time of enrollment.
“Dr.
Richard Mayeux’s WHICAP study enables us to follow a large group of healthy
elderly individuals, some of whom have gone on to develop Alzheimer’s disease,”
said Dr. Small. “This study has given us a unique opportunity to image and
characterize patients with Alzheimer’s in its earliest, preclinical stage.”
The 96
adults were followed for an average of 3.5 years, at which time 12 individuals
were found to have progressed to mild Alzheimer’s disease. An analysis of the baseline fMRI images of
those 12 individuals found significant decreases in cerebral blood volume (CBV)
— a measure of metabolic activity — in the LEC compared with that of the 84
adults who were free of dementia.
A
second part of the study addressed the role of tau and APP in LEC dysfunction.
While previous studies have suggested that entorhinal cortex dysfunction is
associated with both tau and APP abnormalities, it was not known how these
proteins interact to drive this dysfunction, particularly in preclinical
Alzheimer’s.
To
answer this question, explained first author Usman Khan, an MD-PhD student
based in Dr. Small’s lab, the team created three mouse models, one with
elevated levels of tau in the LEC, one with elevated levels of APP, and one
with elevated levels of both proteins. The researchers found that the LEC
dysfunction occurred only in the mice with both tau and APP.
The
study has implications for both research and treatment.
“Now
that we’ve pinpointed where Alzheimer’s starts, and shown that those changes
are observable using fMRI, we may be able to detect Alzheimer’s at its earliest
preclinical stage, when the disease might be more treatable and before it
spreads to other brain regions,” said Dr. Small.
In
addition, say the researchers, the new imaging method could be used to assess
the efficacy of promising Alzheimer’s drugs during the disease’s early stages.
(Source:
Alzheimer’s Reading Room, 28 December 2013)
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