| Literature DB >> 31259307 |
Lorenzo Pasquini1, Farzaneh Rahmani2, Somayeh Maleki-Balajoo3,4, Renaud La Joie1, Mojtaba Zarei4, Christian Sorg5,6,7, Alexander Drzezga8, Masoud Tahmasian4.
Abstract
The posteromedial cortex (PMC) and medial temporal lobes (MTL) are two brain regions particularly vulnerable in Alzheimer's disease (AD). We have reviewed the spatiotemporal patterns of amyloid-β and tau accumulation, local MTL functional alterations and MTL-PMC network reconfiguration, and propose a model to relate these elements to each other. Functional and structural MTL-PMC disconnection happen concomitant with amyloid-β plaques and neurofibrillary tau accumulation within these same regions. Ongoing disconnection is accompanied by dysfunctional intrinsic local MTL circuit hyperexcitability, which exacerbates across distinct clinical stages of AD. Our overarching model proposes a sequence of events relating the spatiotemporal patterns of amyloid-β and tau accumulation to MTL-PMC disconnection and local MTL hyperexcitability. We hypothesize that cortical PMC amyloid-β pathology induces long-range information processing deficits through functional and structural MTL-PMC dysconnectivity at early disease stages, which in turn drives local MTL circuit hyperexcitability. Intrinsic local MTL circuit hyperexcitability subsequently accelerates local age-related tau deposition, facilitating tau spread from the MTL to the PMC, eventually resulting in extensive structural degeneration of white and grey matter as the disease advances. We hope that the present model may inform future longitudinal studies needed to test the proposed sequence of events.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; amyloid-β ; default mode network; disconnection; hyperexcitability; medial temporal lobe; mild cognitive impairment; posteromedial cortex; tau
Year: 2019 PMID: 31259307 PMCID: PMC6597961 DOI: 10.3233/ADR-190121
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Alzheimers Dis Rep ISSN: 2542-4823
Fig.1The MTL and PMC of the DMN. A. Publicly available spatial map of the DMN derived from an independent component analysis on resting-state fMRI data of 36 healthy subjects (https://www.fmrib.ox.ac.uk/datasets/brainmap+rsns/). B and C show the location of the PMC and MTL, respectively (Harvard-Oxford Cortical and Subcortical Atlas). DMN, default mode network; MTL, medial temporal lobes; PMC, parietomedial cortex.
Fig.2Proposed trajectory for MTL-PMC disconnection and MTL circuit hyperexcitability across clinical stages of AD. A) MTL-PMC disconnection progressively increases across the clinical AD trajectory (indicated by shades of grey), starting with functional (orange curve) and followed by structural dysconnectivity (red) reflecting dysfunctional communication between both regions but not yet extensive neuronal death and degeneration at early AD stages. Functional and structural dysconnectivity are eventually followed by disconnection measured through white matter atrophy reflecting overt degeneration (violet). B) In parallel to ongoing MTL-PMC disconnection, local MTL functional hyperexcitability takes place across stages of AD. On the one hand, task-related MTL activity follows an inverse-U-shaped activation trajectory, with hyperactivity patterns in early MCI followed by hypoactivity at later disease stages (blue hyperbola). On the other hand, during resting-state conditions the MTL is characterized by progressive local hyperconnectivity across clinical AD stages (green curve). It is currently unknown whether at final stages, MTL hyperconnectivity is sustained or eventually drops due to ongoing MTL degeneration (shaded green lines). AD, Alzheimer’s disease; MCI, mild cognitive impairment; MTL, medial temporal lobes; PMC, parietomedial cortex.
Fig.3AD model linking MTL-PMC disconnection and MTL circuit hyperexcitability with tau and amyloid-β pathology. The sequence of events schematized in panels A and B are complementary and do not mutually exclude each other. A) At initial disease stages, amyloid-β pathology impairs the normal information flow between the MTL and PMC by driving functional and structural dysconnectivity between the PMC and the MTL, which results in disinhibition of the local MTL circuit and local MTL hyperactivity and hyperconnectivity during task and rest. MTL circuit hyperexcitability is the driving force accelerating age-related tau accumulation and atrophy in the MTL. B) Tau accumulation and atrophy in the MTL increase levels of local MTL circuit hyperexcitability, resulting in additional tau accumulation and facilitating subsequent tau spread out from the MTL to the PMC. Tau spread from the MTL to the PMC leads to advanced MTL-PMC disconnection through degeneration of white-matter tracts, eventually followed by cortical atrophy of the PMC. MTL, medial temporal lobes; PMC, parietomedial cortex.