Astrocyte reactivity influences amyloid-β effects on tau pathology in preclinical Alzheimer’s disease

Author:

Bellaver BrunaORCID,Povala GuilhermeORCID,Ferreira Pamela C. L.ORCID,Ferrari-Souza João Pedro,Leffa Douglas T.,Lussier Firoza Z.,Benedet Andréa L.,Ashton Nicholas J.,Triana-Baltzer Gallen,Kolb Hartmuth C.,Tissot CécileORCID,Therriault JosephORCID,Servaes Stijn,Stevenson Jenna,Rahmouni Nesrine,Lopez Oscar L.ORCID,Tudorascu Dana L.,Villemagne Victor L.,Ikonomovic Milos D.,Gauthier Serge,Zimmer Eduardo R.,Zetterberg HenrikORCID,Blennow KajORCID,Aizenstein Howard J.,Klunk William E.,Snitz Beth E.,Maki Pauline,Thurston Rebecca C.ORCID,Cohen Ann D.,Ganguli Mary,Karikari Thomas K.,Rosa-Neto PedroORCID,Pascoal Tharick A.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractAn unresolved question for the understanding of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) pathophysiology is why a significant percentage of amyloid-β (Aβ)-positive cognitively unimpaired (CU) individuals do not develop detectable downstream tau pathology and, consequently, clinical deterioration. In vitro evidence suggests that reactive astrocytes unleash Aβ effects in pathological tau phosphorylation. Here, in a biomarker study across three cohorts (n = 1,016), we tested whether astrocyte reactivity modulates the association of Aβ with tau phosphorylation in CU individuals. We found that Aβ was associated with increased plasma phosphorylated tau only in individuals positive for astrocyte reactivity (Ast+). Cross-sectional and longitudinal tau–positron emission tomography analyses revealed an AD-like pattern of tau tangle accumulation as a function of Aβ only in CU Ast+individuals. Our findings suggest astrocyte reactivity as an important upstream event linking Aβ with initial tau pathology, which may have implications for the biological definition of preclinical AD and for selecting CU individuals for clinical trials.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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