TY - JOUR
T1 - Uncovering atrophy progression pattern and mechanisms in individuals at risk of Alzheimer's disease
AU - the PREVENT-AD Research Group4 and Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI)
AU - Tremblay, Christina
AU - Rahayel, Shady
AU - Pastor-Bernier, Alexandre
AU - St-Onge, Frdric
AU - Vo, Andrew
AU - Rheault, François
AU - Daneault, Véronique
AU - Morys, Filip
AU - Rajah, Natasha
AU - Villeneuve, Sylvia
AU - Dagher, Alain
AU - Breitner, John
AU - Baillet, Sylvain
AU - Bellec, Pierre
AU - Bohbot, Vronique
AU - Chakravarty, Mallar
AU - Collins, D. Louis
AU - Etienne, Pierre
AU - Evans, Alan
AU - Gauthier, Serge
AU - Hoge, Rick
AU - Ituria-Medina, Yasser
AU - Multhaup, Gerhard
AU - Münter, Lisa Marie
AU - Nair, Vasavan
AU - Poirier, Judes
AU - Rosa-Neto, Pedro
AU - Soucy, Jean Paul
AU - Vachon-Presseau, Etienne
AU - Amouyel, Philippe
AU - Appleby, Melissa
AU - Ashton, Nicholas
AU - Ayranci, Gülebru
AU - Bedetti, Christophe
AU - Brandt, Jason
AU - Westman, Ann Brinkmalm
AU - Cuello, Claudio
AU - Dadar, Mahsa
AU - Daoust, Leslie Ann
AU - Das, Samir
AU - Dauar-Tedeschi, Marina
AU - De Beaumont, Louis
AU - Dea, Doris
AU - Descoteaux, Maxime
AU - Dufour, Marianne
AU - Farzin, Sarah
AU - Ferdinand, Fabiola
AU - Fonov, Vladimir
AU - Fontaine, David
AU - Gagné, Guylaine
AU - Gonneaud, Julie
AU - Kat, Justin
AU - Kazazian, Christina
AU - Labont, Anne
AU - Lafaille-Magnan, Marie Elyse
AU - Lalancette, Marc
AU - Lambert, Jean Charles
AU - Leoutsakos, Jeannie Marie
AU - Lepage, Claude
AU - Madjar, Ccile
AU - Maillet, David
AU - Maltais, Jean Robert
AU - Mathotaarachchi, Sulantha
AU - Mayrand, Ginette
AU - Michaud, Diane
AU - Montine, Thomas
AU - Morris, John
AU - Daneault, Véronique
AU - Pascoal, Tharick
AU - Peillieux, Sandra
AU - Petkova, Mirela
AU - Rioux, Pierre
AU - Sager, Mark
AU - Saint-Fort, Eunice Farah
AU - Savard, Mélissa
AU - Sperling, Reisa
AU - Tabrizi, Shirin
AU - Tariot, Pierre
AU - Teigner, Eduard
AU - Thomas, Ronald
AU - Toussaint, Paule Joanne
AU - Tuwaig, Miranda
AU - Venugopalan, Vinod
AU - Verfaillie, Sander
AU - Vogel, Jacob
AU - Wan, Karen
AU - Wang, Seqian
AU - Yu, Elsa
AU - Petersen, R. C.
AU - Aisen, P. S.
AU - Beckett, L. A.
AU - Donohue, M. C.
AU - Gamst, A. C.
AU - Harvey, D. J.
AU - Jack, C. R.
AU - Jagust, W. J.
AU - Shaw, L. M.
AU - Toga, A. W.
AU - Trojanowski, J. Q.
AU - Weiner, M. W.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2025.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Alzheimer's disease is associated with pre-symptomatic changes in brain morphometry and accumulation of abnormal tau and amyloid-beta pathology. Studying the development of brain changes prior to symptoms onset may lead to early diagnostic biomarkers and a better understanding of Alzheimer's disease pathophysiology. Alzheimer's disease pathology is thought to arise from a combination of protein accumulation and spreading via neural connections, but how these processes influence brain atrophy progression in the pre-symptomatic phases remains unclear. Individuals with a family history of Alzheimer's disease (FHAD) have an elevated risk of Alzheimer's disease, providing an opportunity to study the pre-symptomatic phase. Here, we used structural MRI from three databases (Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative, Pre-symptomatic Evaluation of Experimental or Novel Treatments for Alzheimer Disease and Montreal Adult Lifespan Study) to map atrophy progression in FHAD and Alzheimer's disease and assess the constraining effects of structural connectivity on atrophy progression. Cross-sectional and longitudinal data up to 4 years were used to perform atrophy progression analysis in FHAD and Alzheimer's disease compared with controls. PET radiotracers were also used to quantify the distribution of abnormal tau and amyloid-beta protein isoforms at baseline. We first derived cortical atrophy progression maps using deformation-based morphometry from 153 FHAD, 156 Alzheimer's disease and 116 controls with similar age, education and sex at baseline. We next examined the spatial relationship between atrophy progression and spatial patterns of tau aggregates and amyloid-beta plaques deposition, structural connectivity and neurotransmitter receptor and transporter distributions. Our results show that there were similar patterns of atrophy progression in FHAD and Alzheimer's disease, notably in the cingulate, temporal and parietal cortices, with more widespread and severe atrophy in Alzheimer's disease. Both tau and amyloid-beta pathology tended to accumulate in regions that were structurally connected in FHAD and Alzheimer's disease. The pattern of atrophy and its progression also aligned with existing structural connectivity in FHAD. In Alzheimer's disease, our findings suggest that atrophy progression results from pathology propagation that occurred earlier, on a previously intact connectome. Moreover, a relationship was found between serotonin receptor spatial distribution and atrophy progression in Alzheimer's disease. The current study demonstrates that regions showing atrophy progression in FHAD and Alzheimer's disease present with specific connectivity and cellular characteristics, uncovering some of the mechanisms involved in pre-clinical and clinical neurodegeneration.
AB - Alzheimer's disease is associated with pre-symptomatic changes in brain morphometry and accumulation of abnormal tau and amyloid-beta pathology. Studying the development of brain changes prior to symptoms onset may lead to early diagnostic biomarkers and a better understanding of Alzheimer's disease pathophysiology. Alzheimer's disease pathology is thought to arise from a combination of protein accumulation and spreading via neural connections, but how these processes influence brain atrophy progression in the pre-symptomatic phases remains unclear. Individuals with a family history of Alzheimer's disease (FHAD) have an elevated risk of Alzheimer's disease, providing an opportunity to study the pre-symptomatic phase. Here, we used structural MRI from three databases (Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative, Pre-symptomatic Evaluation of Experimental or Novel Treatments for Alzheimer Disease and Montreal Adult Lifespan Study) to map atrophy progression in FHAD and Alzheimer's disease and assess the constraining effects of structural connectivity on atrophy progression. Cross-sectional and longitudinal data up to 4 years were used to perform atrophy progression analysis in FHAD and Alzheimer's disease compared with controls. PET radiotracers were also used to quantify the distribution of abnormal tau and amyloid-beta protein isoforms at baseline. We first derived cortical atrophy progression maps using deformation-based morphometry from 153 FHAD, 156 Alzheimer's disease and 116 controls with similar age, education and sex at baseline. We next examined the spatial relationship between atrophy progression and spatial patterns of tau aggregates and amyloid-beta plaques deposition, structural connectivity and neurotransmitter receptor and transporter distributions. Our results show that there were similar patterns of atrophy progression in FHAD and Alzheimer's disease, notably in the cingulate, temporal and parietal cortices, with more widespread and severe atrophy in Alzheimer's disease. Both tau and amyloid-beta pathology tended to accumulate in regions that were structurally connected in FHAD and Alzheimer's disease. The pattern of atrophy and its progression also aligned with existing structural connectivity in FHAD. In Alzheimer's disease, our findings suggest that atrophy progression results from pathology propagation that occurred earlier, on a previously intact connectome. Moreover, a relationship was found between serotonin receptor spatial distribution and atrophy progression in Alzheimer's disease. The current study demonstrates that regions showing atrophy progression in FHAD and Alzheimer's disease present with specific connectivity and cellular characteristics, uncovering some of the mechanisms involved in pre-clinical and clinical neurodegeneration.
KW - Alzheimer's disease
KW - brain atrophy
KW - protein propagation
KW - serotonin receptor
KW - structural connectivity
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105000292167&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1093/braincomms/fcaf099
DO - 10.1093/braincomms/fcaf099
M3 - Article
C2 - 40092368
AN - SCOPUS:105000292167
SN - 2632-1297
VL - 7
JO - Brain Communications
JF - Brain Communications
IS - 2
M1 - fcaf099
ER -