Neuroinflammation and protein aggregation co-localize across the frontotemporal dementia spectrum

Author:

Bevan-Jones W Richard1,Cope Thomas E23,Jones P Simon2,Kaalund Sanne S2ORCID,Passamonti Luca24,Allinson Kieren5,Green Oliver4,Hong Young T6,Fryer Tim D6,Arnold Robert1,Coles Jonathan P7,Aigbirhio Franklin I6,Larner Andrew J8,Patterson Karalyn23,O’Brien John T1,Rowe James B23

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychiatry, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK

2. Cambridge University Department of Clinical Neurosciences and Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Cambridge, UK

3. Medical Research Council Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK

4. Istituto di Bioimmagini e Fisiologia Molecolare (IBFM), Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (CNR), via Fratelli Cervi, Milano, Italy

5. Department of Pathology, Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Cambridge, Cambridge, UK

6. Wolfson Brain Imaging Centre, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK

7. Division of Anaesthesia, University of Cambridge, UK

8. Department of Neurology, The Walton Centre, Liverpool, UK

Abstract

Abstract The clinical syndromes of frontotemporal dementia are clinically and neuropathologically heterogeneous, but processes such as neuroinflammation may be common across the disease spectrum. We investigated how neuroinflammation relates to the localization of tau and TDP-43 pathology, and to the heterogeneity of clinical disease. We used PET in vivo with (i) 11C-PK-11195, a marker of activated microglia and a proxy index of neuroinflammation; and (ii) 18F-AV-1451, a radioligand with increased binding to pathologically affected regions in tauopathies and TDP-43-related disease, and which is used as a surrogate marker of non-amyloid-β protein aggregation. We assessed 31 patients with frontotemporal dementia (10 with behavioural variant, 11 with the semantic variant and 10 with the non-fluent variant), 28 of whom underwent both 18F-AV-1451 and 11C-PK-11195 PET, and matched control subjects (14 for 18F-AV-1451 and 15 for 11C-PK-11195). We used a univariate region of interest analysis, a paired correlation analysis of the regional relationship between binding distributions of the two ligands, a principal component analysis of the spatial distributions of binding, and a multivariate analysis of the distribution of binding that explicitly controls for individual differences in ligand affinity for TDP-43 and different tau isoforms. We found significant group-wise differences in 11C-PK-11195 binding between each patient group and controls in frontotemporal regions, in both a regions-of-interest analysis and in the comparison of principal spatial components of binding. 18F-AV-1451 binding was increased in semantic variant primary progressive aphasia compared to controls in the temporal regions, and both semantic variant primary progressive aphasia and behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia differed from controls in the expression of principal spatial components of binding, across temporal and frontotemporal cortex, respectively. There was a strong positive correlation between 11C-PK-11195 and 18F-AV-1451 uptake in all disease groups, across widespread cortical regions. We confirmed this association with post-mortem quantification in 12 brains, demonstrating strong associations between the regional densities of microglia and neuropathology in FTLD-TDP (A), FTLD-TDP (C), and FTLD-Pick's. This was driven by amoeboid (activated) microglia, with no change in the density of ramified (sessile) microglia. The multivariate distribution of 11C-PK-11195 binding related better to clinical heterogeneity than did 18F-AV-1451: distinct spatial modes of neuroinflammation were associated with different frontotemporal dementia syndromes and supported accurate classification of participants. These in vivo findings indicate a close association between neuroinflammation and protein aggregation in frontotemporal dementia. The inflammatory component may be important in shaping the clinical and neuropathological patterns of the diverse clinical syndromes of frontotemporal dementia.

Funder

National Institute for Health Research Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre

Cambridge Brain Bank

Wellcome Trust

Cambridge Centre for Parkinson-plus; the Medical Research Council

National Institute for Health Research, Association of British Neurologists

Patrick Berthoud Charitable Trust

Lundbeck Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Clinical Neurology

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