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  4. Multidimensional MRI reveals cortical astrogliosis linked to dementia in Alzheimer’s disease
 
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Multidimensional MRI reveals cortical astrogliosis linked to dementia in Alzheimer’s disease

Journal
Brain Communications
Series/Report No.
Brain Communications
Journal Volume
7
Journal Issue
3
Start Page
fcaf245
ISSN
2632-1297
Date Issued
2025
Author(s)
Barsoum, Stephanie
Latimer, Caitlin S
Nolan, Amber L
Barrett, Alexander
KO-PING CHANG  
Troncoso, Juan C
Keene, C Dirk
Benjamini, Dan
DOI
10.1093/braincomms/fcaf245
URI
https://scholars.lib.ntu.edu.tw/handle/123456789/732209
Abstract
Despite the presence of significant Alzheimer's disease pathology, characterized by amyloid β (Aβ) plaques and phosphorylated tau (pTau) tangles, some cognitively unimpaired elderly individuals do not inevitably develop dementia. Cortical astroglial inflammation, a ubiquitous feature of symptomatic Alzheimer's disease, shows a strong correlation with cognitive impairment severity, highlighting the influence of factors beyond classical pathology. However, non-invasively imaging neuroinflammation, particularly astrogliosis, using MRI remains a significant challenge. Here we sought to address this challenge and to leverage multidimensional (MD) MRI, a powerful approach that combines relaxation with diffusion MR contrasts, to map cortical astrogliosis in the human brain by accessing sub-voxel information. Our goal was to investigate whether MD-MRI can map astroglial pathology in the cerebral cortex, and if so, whether it can distinguish cognitively normal state from dementia in the presence of hallmark Alzheimer's disease neuropathological changes. We adopted a multimodal approach by integrating histological and MRI analyses using human postmortem brain samples from two independent discovery and replication cohorts. Ex vivo cerebral cortical tissue specimens were derived from two groups - non-demented individuals with varying levels of postmortem Alzheimer's disease pathology and individuals with both Alzheimer's disease pathology and dementia - and scanned using 7 T MRI. We acquired and processed MD-MRI, diffusion tensor, and quantitative T1 and T2 MRI data, followed by histopathology on the same tissue. By co-registering MRI and microscopy data, we performed quantitative multimodal analyses, leveraging targeted immunostaining to assess MD-MRI sensitivity and specificity towards Aβ, pTau, and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), a marker for astrogliosis. Our discovery analysis reveals a distinct MD-MRI signature of cortical astrogliosis, enabling the creation of predictive maps for cognitive state amid Alzheimer's disease neuropathological changes. Multiple linear regression analysis linked histological values to MRI changes, revealing that the MD-MRI cortical astrogliosis biomarker was significantly associated with GFAP burden (standardized β = 0.658/0.709, pFDR < 0.0001), but not with Aβ (standardized β = 0.009/0.120, pFDR = 0.913/0.274) or pTau (standardized β = -0.196/0.158, pFDR = 0.051/0.251), for the discovery/replication groups, respectively. Conversely, none of the conventional MRI parameters showed significant associations with GFAP burden in the cortex. Finally, we showed that the MD-MRI-derived astrogliosis biomarker is the only MRI measure capable of predicting cognitive state. While the extent to which pathological glial activation contributes to neuronal damage and cognitive impairment in Alzheimer's disease is uncertain, developing a non-invasive imaging method to see its effects holds promise from a mechanistic perspective and as a potential predictor of cognitive outcomes.
SDGs

[SDGs]SDG3

Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Type
journal article

臺大位居世界頂尖大學之列,為永久珍藏及向國際展現本校豐碩的研究成果及學術能量,圖書館整合機構典藏(NTUR)與學術庫(AH)不同功能平台,成為臺大學術典藏NTU scholars。期能整合研究能量、促進交流合作、保存學術產出、推廣研究成果。

To permanently archive and promote researcher profiles and scholarly works, Library integrates the services of “NTU Repository” with “Academic Hub” to form NTU Scholars.

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開放取用是從使用者角度提升資訊取用性的社會運動,應用在學術研究上是透過將研究著作公開供使用者自由取閱,以促進學術傳播及因應期刊訂購費用逐年攀升。同時可加速研究發展、提升研究影響力,NTU Scholars即為本校的開放取用典藏(OA Archive)平台。(點選深入了解OA)

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