| Literature DB >> 35044500 |
Alifiya Kapasi1,2, L Yu3,4, V Petyuk5, K Arfanakis3,6,7, D A Bennett3,4, J A Schneider3,8,4.
Abstract
Emerging evidence suggests that small vessel disease (SVD) is a risk factor for clinical dementia and may contribute to AD neuropathological changes. Watershed brain regions are located at the most distal areas between arterial territories, making them vulnerable to SVD-related changes. We examined the association of pathologic markers of SVD, specifically arteriolosclerosis in watershed brain regions, with AD pathologic changes. Participants (N = 982; mean age-at-death = 90; 69% women) were enrolled as part of one of two cohort studies of aging and dementia. At autopsy, neuropathological evaluation included semi-quantitative grading of arteriolosclerosis pathology from 2 cortical watershed regions: the anterior watershed (AWS) and posterior watershed (PWS), densities for cortical β-amyloid and tau-tangle pathology, and other common age-related pathologies. Linear regression models examined the association of watershed arteriolosclerosis pathology with β-amyloid and tau-tangle burden. In follow-up analyses, available ex-vivo MRI and proteomics data in a subset of decedents were leveraged to examine the association of whole brain measure of WMH, as a presumed MRI marker of SVD, with β-amyloid and tau-tangle burden, as well as to examine the association of watershed arteriolosclerosis with proteomic tau. Watershed arteriolosclerosis was common, with 45% of older persons having moderate-to-severe arteriolosclerosis pathology in the AWS region, and 35% in the PWS. In fully adjusted models that controlled for demographics and common age-related pathologies, an increase in severity of PWS arteriolosclerosis was associated with a higher burden of tau-tangle burden, specifically neocortical tau burden, but not with β-amyloid. AWS arteriolosclerosis was not associated with β-amyloid or tau pathology. Ex-vivo WMH was associated with greater tau-tangle pathology burden but not β-amyloid. Furthermore, PWS arteriolosclerosis was associated with higher abundance of tau phosphopeptides, that promote formation of tau aggregates. These data provide compelling evidence that SVD, specifically posterior watershed arteriolosclerosis pathology, is linked with tau pathological changes in the aging brain.Entities:
Keywords: Aging; Neuropathology; Small vessel disease; Tau pathology
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35044500 PMCID: PMC8858293 DOI: 10.1007/s00401-021-02397-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol ISSN: 0001-6322 Impact factor: 17.088
Fig. 1Study sample
Fig. 2Schematic representation of watershed border zones and tissue sampling. A schematic representation of the anterior, middle, and posterior cerebral arterial territories marked by the dotted lines, highlighting areas of the anterior and posterior watershed border zones
Fig. 3Watershed arteriolosclerosis pathology. Bar chart demonstrating the severity of arteriolosclerosis pathology in AWS and PWS regions
Characteristics of participants
| All | |
|---|---|
| Demographics | |
| Age at death, mean y (SD) | 90.3 (6.3) |
| Women, | 683 (69.5%) |
| Education, mean (SD) | 16.1 (3.5) |
| Clinical diagnosis | |
| No cognitive impairment | 331 (33.7%) |
| Mild cognitive impairment | 215 (21.9%) |
| Dementia | 436 (44.4%) |
| Vascular risk factors, | |
| Diabetes | 173 (22.5%)* |
| Hypertension | 527 (68.6%)* |
| Neuropathologic, | |
| β-Amyloid burden, mean (SD) | 1.6 (1.1) |
| Tau-tangle burden, mean (SD) | 1.7 (1.5) |
| Moderate-to-severe AWS arteriolosclerosis | 438 (44.6%) |
| Moderate-to-severe PWS arteriolosclerosis | 341 (34.7%) |
| Moderate-to-severe CAA | 354 (34.5%)* |
| Moderate-to-severe atherosclerosis | 260 (26.5%) |
| Presence of microinfarcts | 316 (32.2%) |
| Presence of macroscopic infarcts | 351 (35.7%) |
| Moderate-to-severe TDP-43 | 329 (33.9%)* |
| Any Lewy bodies | 258 (26.3%)* |
**Data missing for n = 1 for diabetes; n = 1 for hypertension; n = 11 for CAA; n = 12 for TDP-43; n = 1 for Lewy body
Fig. 4Cortical β-amyloid and tau-tangle burden across vessel severity. Boxplots of β-amyloid and tau-tangle burden across severity levels of AWS/PWS arteriolosclerosis pathology
Fig. 5Illustrative cases. Histological sections from representative participants. Case 1 is a female participant, (age-at-death is 89.2 years), with a tau-tangle burden within the 75th–100th percentile and severe arteriolosclerosis pathology in watershed brain regions. Case 2 is a female participant (age-at-death is 89.6 years), with a tau-tangle burden within the 25th percentile and mild arteriosclerosis pathology in watershed brain regions. Images represent H&E-stained sections of the posterior watershed brain regions (i and ii) and AT8-stained sections for PHF-tau-tangle pathology in the CA1 subregion of the mid-hippocampus (iii and vi), midfrontal gyrus (iv), and inferior parietal cortex (v)
Association watershed arteriolosclerosis with β-amyloid and tau-tangle pathology
| Overall amyloid | Mesial temporal β-amyloid | Neocortical β-amyloid | Overall tangle | Mesial temporal tau-tangle | Neocortical tau-tangle | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AWS arteriolosclerosis | 0.06 (0.04,0.13) | 0.03 (0.03,0.32) | 0.06 (0.04,0.12) | 0.005 (0.04,0.91) | − 0.01 (0.06,0.87) | 0.01 (0.05,0.67) |
| PWS arteriolosclerosis | − 0.04 (0.04, 0.29) | − 0.02 (0.03,0.59) | − 0.04 (0.04,0.28) | 0.09 (0.06,0.14) |
Linear regression models with six separate outcomes, all adjusted for age-at-death, sex, education, CAA, atherosclerosis, macroscopic and microscopic infarcts, TDP-43, and Lewy body pathology. Values in cells are estimated coefficients (SE, p value)
p-values marked with bold indicate statistical significance
Association between watershed arteriolosclerosis and phosphorylated tau peptides
| S202 | T217 | S262 | S305 | S404 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AWS arteriolosclerosis | 0.01 (0.02, 0.71) | 0.01 (0.03, 0.71) | − 0.01 (0.05, 0.78) | − 0.01 (0.03, 0.78) | |
| PWS arteriolosclerosis |
Linear regression models with change in tau phosphorylation stoichiometry as five separate outcomes, all adjusted for age-at-death, sex, education, and post-mortem interval. Values in cells are estimated coefficients (SE, p value).
p-values marked with bold indicate statistical significance