| Literature DB >> 30832741 |
Garrett S Gibbons1, Soo-Jung Kim1, John L Robinson1, Lakshmi Changolkar1, David J Irwin1,2, Leslie M Shaw1, Virginia M-Y Lee1, John Q Trojanowski3.
Abstract
Pathological tau aggregates in Alzheimer's disease (AD) and frontotemporal lobar degeneration-tau (FTLD-tau) adopt distinct conformations differentiated by the AD-tau specific monoclonal antibody (mAb) GT-38 that are not readily visualized using phosphorylation-specific anti-tau mAbs. To determine the extent of co-morbid AD-tau pathology in FTLD-tau, we performed immunohistochemical (IHC) staining with GT-38 and assigned Braak stages of AD-tau in a cohort 180 FTLD-tau cases consisting of corticobasal degeneration (CBD; n = 49), progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP; n = 109), and Pick's disease (PiD; n = 22). Nearly two-thirds of patients (n = 115 of 180, 63.8%) with FTLD-tau had some degree of comorbid AD-tau pathology and 20.5% of the FTLD-tau cohort had Braak stage ≥B2, consistent with medium-to-high-level AD neuropathological change (ADNPC). The PSP group had the highest frequency of medium-high AD-tau pathology compared to other tauopathies (PSP = 31/109, 28.4%; Picks = 2/22, 9.1%, CBD = 4/49, 8.2%) but neuropathological diagnosis was not found to be a significant independent predictor of medium-high AD Braak stage in a multivariate model after accounting for age at death (OR = 1.09; 95% CI = 1.03-1.15; p = 0.002) and CERAD plaque scores (OR = 3.75, 95% CI = 1.58-8.89; p = 0.003), suggesting there is no predilection for a specific FTLD tauopathy to develop AD-tau co-pathology after accounting for age. Patients with FTLD-tau who had, clinically significant, medium-high AD-tau pathology had significantly higher antemortem CSF levels of both total-tau (t-tau; mean = 89.98 pg/ml, SD = 36.70 pg/ml) and phosphorylated-tau (p-tau; mean = 20.45 pg/ml, SD = 9.31 pg/ml) compared to patients with negligible-low AD-tau, t-tau (mean = 43.04 pg/ml, SD = 25.40 pg/ml) and p-tau (mean = 11.90 pg/ml, SD = 4.48 pg/ml) (p ≤ 0.001 both). Finally, in an exploratory analysis in our largest pathology group (PSP) we find an association of GT-38 AD-tau Braak stage with lower baseline MMSE (p = 0.03). Together, these finding validate the use of GT-38 to selectively detect AD-tau pathology in the context of FTLD-tau and provides a novel tool to investigate associations of clinical phenotypes amongst co-morbid tauopathies.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Frontotemporal lobar degeneration; Monoclonal antibody; Tau; Tauopathy
Year: 2019 PMID: 30832741 PMCID: PMC6399892 DOI: 10.1186/s40478-019-0687-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol Commun ISSN: 2051-5960 Impact factor: 7.801
Fig. 1GT-38 selectively detects AD-tau pathology in the context of co-occurring FTLD-tau. IHC staining of hippocampus CA1, dentate gyrus, and pons with GT-38 or phospho-tau antibody PHF1 demonstrates that GT-38 detects tau NFTs in CA1 region but not neuronal inclusions in the molecular layer of the dentate gyrus present in FTLD-tau. GT-38 does not detect neuronal or astrocytic tau pathology in pons of FTLD-tau cases verifying selectivity of GT-38 for AD-tau pathology
Fig. 2GT-38 detects pathological tau aggregates containing 3R and 4R tau isoforms. Co-immunofluorescent staining of GT-38 with 3R- or 4R-tau specific antibodies in a AD midfrontal cortex, b CBD, PSP, and PiD hippocampus in regions with co-occurring AD-tau pathology, demonstrating complete colocalization with 4R tau in the context of PiD and complete colocalization with 3R tau pathology in the context of CBD and PSP, c GT-38 negative regions in CBD, PSP, and PiD hippocampus without concomitant AD-tau pathology, but with tau pathology comprised of only 3R- or 4R-tau respectively
Fig. 3GT-38 validation for Braak staging. GT-38 IHC staining of AD-tau pathology compared to the diagnostic standard antibody PHF1 detects NFTs to a similar extent, but fewer neuropil threads in CA1 regions of hippocampal tissue sections from cases of varying Braak stages (B0-B3) and AD-tau severity
Summary of patient demographics and Braak staging of AD-tau
| CBD | PSP | PiD | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | M = 19 | M = 69 | M = 13 |
| F = 30 | F = 40 | F = 9 | |
| Age at death (years) | 67.5 (9.5) | 76 (71, 81) | 67 (61, 74) |
| Age at onset (years) | 61.6 (9.3) | 67 (62,74) | 57.8 (11.1) |
| Disease duration (years) | 6.0 (2.5) | 7 (4, 10) | 9.0 (4.0) |
| PMI (hours) | 11 (5, 17) | 12 (6, 19) | 12.5 (7, 20) |
| Brain weight (g) | 1139 (139) | 1213 (1121, 1304) | 1026 (161) |
| Clinical phenotype | CBS = 18 | PSP-RS = 61 | CBS = 2 |
| PSP = 12 | PSP-SL = 6 | PPA = 1 | |
| PPA = 9 | PSP-CBS = 8 | bvFTD-FTLD = 8 | |
| bvFTD-FTLD = 3 | PSP-F = 14 | FTD-NOS = 10 | |
| FTD- NOS = 4 | PSP- | DLB = 1 | |
| AD = 1 | PSP-PGF = 1 | ||
| DLB = 1 | Other cognitive = 8 | ||
| Undetermined = 1 | Other motor = 3 | ||
| APOE haplotype | E2/E2 = 0 | E2/E2 = 2 | E2/E2 = 1 |
| E2/E3 = 8 | E2/E3 = 16 | E2/E3 = 1 | |
| E2/E4 = 0 | E2/E4 = 5 | E2/E4 = 0 | |
| E3/E3 = 33 | E3/E3 = 63 | E3/E3 = 16 | |
| E3/E4 = 7 | E3/E4 = 12 | E3/E4 = 3 | |
| E4/E4 = 1 | E4/E4 = 3 | E4/E4 = 0 | |
| N/A = 0 | N/A = 8 | N/A = 1 | |
| CERAD | 0 = 31 | 0 = 53 | 0 = 17 |
| 1 = 9 | 1 = 15 | 1 = 1 | |
| 2 = 3 | 2 = 14 | 2 = 1 | |
| 3 = 2 | 3 = 17 | 3 = 2 | |
| N/A = 4 | N/A = 10 | N/A = 1 | |
| Thal phase | 0 = 27 | 0 = 37 | 0 = 14 |
| 1 = 16 | 1 = 32 | 1 = 3 | |
| 2 = 3 | 2 = 21 | 2 = 4 | |
| 3 = 3 | 3 = 16 | 3 = 1 | |
| N/A = 0 | N/A = 3 | N/A = 0 | |
| Braak stage | B0 = 24 | B0 = 28 | B0 = 13 |
| B1 = 21 | B1 = 50 | B1 = 7 | |
| B2 = 4 | B2 = 25 | B2 = 1 | |
| B3 = 0 | B3 = 6 | B3 = 1 | |
| AD Neuropathological change | Not = 27 | Not = 38 | Not = 14 |
| Low = 19 | Low = 50 | Low = 7 | |
| Intermediate = 3 | Intermediate = 15 | Intermediate = 0 | |
| High = 0 | High = 4 | High = 1 |
Variables with normal distribution are reported as mean (standard deviation) and variables that are non-normally distributed are reported as median (first quartile, third quartile)
PMI post mortem interval from death to autopsy, CERAD consortium to establish a registry for Alzheimer’s disease, CBS corticobasal syndrome, PPA primary progressive aphasia, bvFTD-FTLD behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia – frontotemporal lobar degeneration, DLB dementia with Lewy bodies, FTD-NOS frontotemporal dementia not otherwise specified, RS Richardson’s syndrome, SL speech and language disorders, F frontal lobe cognitive or behavioral presentation, P Parkinsonism, PGF progressive gait freezing, N/A not available
ap < 0.01 difference between PSP and CBD and PiD
bp < 0.05 difference between PSP and CBD and PiD
Fig. 4Braak staging of FTLD-tau cohort with GT-38. AD-tau NFT burden was assessed in the hippocampus, pons/locus coeruleus, and visual cortex of 180 FTLD-tau cases and staged Braak 0–3. a The relative distribution of Braak stages across the entire cohort. b Age at death for each Braak stage (B0 n = 65, B1 n = 78, B2 n = 30, B3 n = 7) *** p < 0.001; * p < 0.05; n.s. = not significant; two-tailed t-test. c PSP cases (B0 = 28, B1 = 50, B2/B3 = 31) had significantly higher frequency of AD-tau (χ2 (4, n = 180) = 17.95; p = 0.0013) compared to CBD (B0 = 24, B1 = 21, B2/B3 = 4) and PiD (B0 = 13, B1 = 7, B2/B3 = 2)
Multivariate regression models to predict post-mortem AD-tau pathology
| Univariate Models | |||||
| Variable | Odds ratio | 95% confidence interval |
| BIC | |
| Neuropathological diagnosis | 2.77 | 1.34–5.71 | 0.006 | 0.055 | 183.23 |
| Gender | 1.11 | 0.54–2.30 | 0.777 | < 0.001 | 193.19 |
| Age at death | 1.12 | 1.06–1.18 | < 0.001 | 0.119 | 171.50 |
| MAPT haplotype H1/H1 | 0.89 | 0.31–2.56 | 0.836 | < 0.001 | 175.52 |
| APOE4 | 1.70 | 0.68–4.24 | 0.259 | 0.007 | 174.35 |
| CERAD score C2/C3 | 5.31 | 2.34–12.09 | < 0.001 | 0.096 | 159.55 |
| Final Multivariate Model | |||||
| Variable | Odds ratio | 95% confidence interval | BIC = 153.38 | ||
| Age at death | 1.09 | 1.03–1.15 | 0.002 | – | – |
| CERAD score C2/C3 | 3.75 | 1.58–8.89 | 0.003 | – | – |
| Intercept | 0.0002 | 3.2 × 10−6, 0.0155 | < 0.001 | – | – |
Table displays univariate associations between negligible-low AD-tau (B0/B1 = 0) and medium-high AD-tau (B2/B3 = 1) and variables in the upper panel and the optimal multivariate model in the lower panel. Based on 165 observations. Model R = 0.1639, p < 0.0001. BIC Bayesian information criteria
reference category = CERAD C0/C1
Fig. 5CSF levels of t-tau and p-tau are elevated in medium-high AD-tau Braak stage group defined by GT-38. Box plots of total tau, phosphorylated tau, and Aβ1–42 CSF levels for negligible-low AD-tau and medium-high AD-tau groups demonstrate statistically significant elevation of t-tau (p < 0.001) and p-tau (p = 0.001) in medium-high AD-tau group but a non-statistically significant trends towards decreased Aβ1–42 (p = 0.155, Mann-Whitney rank sum test)