| Literature DB >> 26572762 |
M Dani1, D J Brooks1,2, P Edison3.
Abstract
Aggregated tau protein is a major neuropathological substrate central to the pathophysiology of neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's disease (AD), frontotemporal dementia, progressive supranuclear palsy, corticobasal degeneration and chronic traumatic encephalopathy. In AD, it has been shown that the density of hyperphosphorylated tau tangles correlates closely with neuronal dysfunction and cell death, unlike β-amyloid. Until now, diagnostic and pathologic information about tau deposition has only been available from invasive techniques such as brain biopsy or autopsy. The recent development of selective in-vivo tau PET imaging ligands including [(18)F]THK523, [(18)F]THK5117, [(18)F]THK5105 and [(18)F]THK5351, [(18)F]AV1451(T807) and [(11)C]PBB3 has provided information about the role of tau in the early phases of neurodegenerative diseases, and provided support for diagnosis, prognosis, and imaging biomarkers to track disease progression. Moreover, the spatial and longitudinal relationship of tau distribution compared with β - amyloid and other pathologies in these diseases can be mapped. In this review, we discuss the role of aggregated tau in tauopathies, the challenges posed in developing selective tau ligands as biomarkers, the state of development in tau tracers, and the new clinical information that has been uncovered, as well as the opportunities for improving diagnosis and designing clinical trials in the future.Entities:
Keywords: Dementia; Neurodegenerative diseases; Tau imaging
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26572762 PMCID: PMC4844651 DOI: 10.1007/s00259-015-3231-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging ISSN: 1619-7070 Impact factor: 9.236
Common tauopathies with descriptions of the structure and distribution of tau aggregates
| Tauopathy | Characteristics of aggregated tau | Location of aggregated tau | Other associations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alzheimer’s disease (AD) | Intracellular NFTs containing both 3R and 4R inclusions; extracellular ‘ghost tangles’ | Stereotypic progression from transentorhinal/entorhinal cortex, to amygdala, hippocampus, then widespread areas of cortex | Co-existence with extracellular β-amyloid plaques. |
| Frontotemporal dementia and Parkinsonism linked to chromosome 17 | Tau cytoplasmic inclusions (3R, 4R and both 3R and 4R) in neuronal and glial cells | Widespread distribution | MAPT gene on chromosome 17q21-22 |
| Progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) | 4R ‘globose’ inclusions, tufted astrocytes, oligodendroglial coiled bodies and threads | Subthalamic nucleus, basal ganglia, brainstem, and occasionally cortex | |
| Corticobasal degeneration (CBD) | 4R ‘ballooned’ neurons and glial inclusions, astrocytic plaques, threads in grey and white matter, coiled bodies | Neocortical areas, and subcortical areas such as striatum | |
| Pick’s disease | Neuronal cytoplasmic Pick bodies (3R inclusions). Straight and twisted filaments | Dentate gyrus, followed by hippocampus, then cortex. Also seen in subcortical structures | |
| Argyrophilic grain disease (AGD) | 4R spindle-shaped neuronal inclusions. Also pretangles, coiled bodies, astrocytic inclusions, and ballooned neurons | Amygdala, entorhinal/transentorhinal cortex, hippocampus | Often co-exists with other tauopathies such as AD. Association with H1 Haplotype of MAPT gene |
| Chronic traumatic encephalopathy | 3R and 4R NFTs and prominent astrocytic tangles | Focal epicentres in the frontal lobe, then widespread cortical areas in a patchy distribution. High density in thalamus, mammillary bodies, brainstem, basal ganglia | Other pathologies can co-exist — β, TDP43, and α-synuclein |
| Primary age-related tauopathy (PART) | 4R NFTs and ghost tangles | Restricted to mesial temporal lobe | Characterised by absence of amyloid plaque |
Fig. 1Chemical structures of current tau tracers. The chemical structures of: a [18F] THK-523, b [18F]THK-5105, c [18F] THK-5117, d [18F] THK-5351, e [11C] PBB3, f [18F]T808, and g [18F]-T807
Fig. 2PET images using the [18F] THK family of tracers. a The first tau tracer, [18F] THK 523 in a healthy control, a subject with semantic dementia and an AD subject. There is increased tracer retention in the AD subject, but no difference between the control and SD Reproduced from Villemagne 2014 [53]. b [18F] THK5105 PET images in a 72-year-old healthy control (MMSE 29) and a 68-year-old AD subject (MMSE 20). Reproduced from Okamura 2014 [54]. c Tau tracer [18F]THK 5117 in a subject with mild, moderate, and severe AD, showing increasing retention of tracer as disease progresses from the medial, anterior, and inferior temporal cortex in mild AD, spreading to association areas in moderate AD, and throughout the neocortex in severe AD. Reproduced from Okamura 2014 [44]
Fig. 3Novel tau tracer [18F]THK-5351 in different stages of cognitive impairment. PET images of [18F]THK-5351 in a healthy control, an MCI subject (MMSE 25), and an AD subject (MMSE 16). There is increasing tracer retention as disease progresses. In the AD patient, a [11C]PIB PET scan shows amyloid deposition in discrete separate areas of cortex. Courtesy of Nobayaki Okamura, unpublished work
Fig. 4Novel tau tracer [18F]AV-1451 (previously [18F]-T807. a [18F]T807 in a healthy control (top left), through increasing severity of cognitive impairment to severe AD (bottom right). Increased tracer retention is seen as disease progresses, with widespread neocortical deposition in severe disease. Reproduced from Chien 2013 [55]. b PET images from two cognitively normal individuals, and one with AD dementia, with amyloid PET images on the top row ([11C]PIB) and tau PET images on the bottom row ([18F] T807). From left to right, increasing amyloid deposition is seen in the neocortex, as well as increasing tau in the inferior temporal cortices. Reproduced from Sperling 2014) [56]. c [18F] T807 in a subject with MCI at baseline, and after 10 months, showing a significant increase in tracer deposition in the temporal and parietal lobes. This indicates the clinical utility of tau imaging in detecting disease progression over relatively short time periods. Reproduced from Mark Mintun, 2015 [57]
Fig. 5Tau tracer [11C]-PBB in differing stages of cognitive impairment. [11C]PBB3 and [11C]PIB in normal controls and AD patients with increasing severity of disease. The arrowheads indicate the hippocampi. While there is minimal tracer retention in the hippocampi of normal controls, there is increasing retention in the AD patients, especially as MMSE declines, with spread from the hippocampus to the neocortex, consistent with Braak staging. Reproduced from Maruyama 2013 [58]