Neurobiology of Disease (Sep 2018)

Does inflammation precede tau aggregation in early Alzheimer's disease? A PET study

  • Peter Parbo,
  • Rola Ismail,
  • Michael Sommerauer,
  • Morten G. Stokholm,
  • Allan K. Hansen,
  • Kim V. Hansen,
  • Ali Amidi,
  • Jeppe L. Schaldemose,
  • Hanne Gottrup,
  • Hans Brændgaard,
  • Simon F. Eskildsen,
  • Per Borghammer,
  • Rainer Hinz,
  • Joel Aanerud,
  • David J. Brooks

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 117
pp. 211 – 216

Abstract

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Objective: Our aim was to assess with positron emission tomography (PET) the temporal and spatial inter-relationships between levels of cortical microglial activation and the aggregated amyloid-β and tau load in mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and early Alzheimer's disease (AD).Methods: Six clinically probable AD and 20 MCI subjects had inflammation (11C-(R)-PK11195), amyloid (11C-PiB) and tau (18F-flortaucipir) PET, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and a neuropsychological assessment. Parametric images of tracer binding were interrogated at a voxel level and by region of interest analyses.Results: 55% of MCI and 83% of AD subjects had a high amyloid-β load. We have previously reported that clusters of correlated amyloid and inflammation levels are present in cortex. Here we found no correlation between levels of inflammation (11C-(R)-PK11195 BPND) and tau (18F-flortaucipir SUVR) or MMSE scores in high amyloid-β cases.Interpretation: While correlated levels of amyloid-β and inflammation can be seen in MCI, we did not detect an association between levels of cortical tau tangles and inflammation in our series of high amyloid-β cases. High levels of inflammation could be seen in amyloid-β positive MCI cases where 18F-flortaucipir signals were low suggesting microglial activation precedes tau tangle formation. Inflammation levels were higher in high amyloid-β MCI than in early AD cases, compatible with it initially playing a protective role.

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