| Literature DB >> 29958546 |
Aiko Ishiki1, Ryuichi Harada2,3,4, Hideaki Kai5, Naomi Sato6, Tomoko Totsune7, Naoki Tomita1, Shoichi Watanuki8, Kotaro Hiraoka8, Yoichi Ishikawa8, Yoshihito Funaki8, Ren Iwata8, Shozo Furumoto8, Manabu Tashiro8, Hironobu Sasano6, Tetsuyuki Kitamoto5, Yukitsuka Kudo1, Kazuhiko Yanai9,8, Katsutoshi Furukawa10, Nobuyuki Okamura9,8,11, Hiroyuki Arai1.
Abstract
Recent positron emission tomography (PET) studies have demonstrated the accumulation of tau PET tracer in the affected region of progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) cases. To confirm the binding target of radiotracer in PSP, we performed an imaging-pathology correlation study in two autopsy-confirmed PSP patients who underwent [18F]THK5351 PET before death. One patient with PSP Richardson syndrome showed elevated tracer retention in the globus pallidus and midbrain. In a patient with PSP-progressive nonfluent aphasia, [18F]THK5351 retention also was observed in the cortical areas, particularly the temporal cortex. Neuropathological examination confirmed PSP in both patients. Regional [18F]THK5351 standardized uptake value ratio (SUVR) in antemortem PET was significantly correlated with monoamine oxidase-B (MAO-B) level, reactive astrocytes density, and tau pathology at postmortem examination. In in vitro autoradiography, specific THK5351 binding was detected in the area of antemortem [18F]THK5351 retention, and binding was blocked completely by a reversible selective MAO-B inhibitor, lazabemide, in brain samples from these patients. In conclusion, [18F]THK5351 PET signals reflect MAO-B expressing reactive astrocytes, which may be associated with tau accumulation in PSP.Entities:
Keywords: Monoamine oxidase; PET; PSP; Reactive astrocyte; Tau; [18F]THK5351
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29958546 PMCID: PMC6025736 DOI: 10.1186/s40478-018-0556-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol Commun ISSN: 2051-5960 Impact factor: 7.801
Fig. 1[18F]THK5351 PET images from two study subjects and a cognitively normal subject. The scale indicates SUVR range from 0 to 4
Fig. 2Neuroimaging, biochemical, in vitro binding correlations in subject 1 (PSP-RS). a Immunoblot analysis of sarkosyl-insoluble tau; 11 regions (Fr, frontal cortex; Pa, parietal cortex; Oc, occipital cortex; HiP, hippocampus; PHG, parahippocampal gyrus; FuG, fusiform gyrus; ITG, inferior temporal gyrus; STG, superior temporal gyrus; Put, putamen; GP, globus pallidus; Cb, Cerebellum) detected by T46 (anti-tau C-terminus). b [18F]THK5351 SUVR plotted against sarkosyl-insoluble tau level (%cerebellum). c [18F]THK5351 SUVR plotted against MAO-B level. d [18F]THK5351 SUVR plotted against GFAP level. e [18F]THK5351 SUVR plotted against in vitro [3H]THK5351 binding
Fig. 3Neuroimaging-histopathologic correlations in subject 1 (PSP-RS). a–n Microscopic examination of tau pathology (a–g) and astrogliosis (h–n). R SFG, right superior frontal gyrus (a, n); R PCG, right posterior cingulate gyrus (b, i); R HiP, right hippocampus (c, j); R GP, right globus pallidus (d, k); Pons (e, l); Midbrain (f, m); and L Cb, left cerebellar cortex (g, n). [18F]THK5351 SUVR plotted against AT8 tau–positive areas (o) and GFAP-positive areas (p)
Fig. 4Neuroimaging-histopathologic correlations in subject 2 (PNFA). a–n Microscopic examination of tau pathology (a–g) and astrogliosis (h–n). L STG, left superior temporal gyrus (a, n); L ITG, left inferior temporal gyrus (b, i); R PCG, right posterior cingulate gyrus (c, j); R HiP, right hippocampus (d, k); R ITG, right inferior temporal gyrus (e, l); R STG, right superior temporal gyrus (f, m); and L Cb, left cerebellar cortex (g, n). [18F]THK5351 SUVR plotted against AT8 tau–positive areas (o) and GFAP-positive areas (p)
Fig. 5In vitro autoradiography of [18F]THK5351 and immunohistochemistry (MAO-B, GFAP, AT8-tau) in frozen sections from subjects. a Basal ganglia from subject 1 and b frontal cortex from subject 2. The specific binding to MAO-B was confirmed by a reversible MAO-B inhibitor, Lazabemide. Scale bars: 5 mm