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Cortical and subcortical pathological burden and neuronal loss in an autopsy series of FTLD-TDP-type C

Authors :
Allegra Kawles
Yasushi Nishihira
Alex Feldman
Nathan Gill
Grace Minogue
Rachel Keszycki
Christina Coventry
Callen Spencer
Jaclyn Lilek
Kaouther Ajroud
Giovanni Coppola
Rosa Rademakers
Emily Rogalski
Sandra Weintraub
Hui Zhang
Margaret E Flanagan
Eileen H Bigio
M -Marsel Mesulam
Changiz Geula
Qinwen Mao
Tamar Gefen
Source :
Brain
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2021.

Abstract

The TDP-43 type C pathological form of frontotemporal lobar degeneration is characterized by the presence of immunoreactive TDP-43 short and long dystrophic neurites, neuronal cytoplasmic inclusions, neuronal loss and gliosis and the absence of neuronal intranuclear inclusions. Frontotemporal lobar degeneration-TDP-type C cases are commonly associated with the semantic variant of primary progressive aphasia or behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia. Here, we provide detailed characterization of regional distributions of pathological TDP-43 and neuronal loss and gliosis in cortical and subcortical regions in 10 TDP-type C cases and investigate the relationship between inclusions and neuronal loss and gliosis. Specimens were obtained from the first 10 TDP-type C cases accessioned from the Northwestern Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center (semantic variant of primary progressive aphasia, n = 7; behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia, n = 3). A total of 42 cortical (majority bilateral) and subcortical regions were immunostained with a phosphorylated TDP-43 antibody and/or stained with haematoxylin–eosin. Regions were evaluated for atrophy, and for long dystrophic neurites, short dystrophic neurites, neuronal cytoplasmic inclusions, and neuronal loss and gliosis using a semiquantitative 5-point scale. We calculated a ‘neuron-to-inclusion’ score (TDP-type C mean score – neuronal loss and gliosis mean score) for each region per case to assess the relationship between TDP-type C inclusions and neuronal loss and gliosis. Primary progressive aphasia cases demonstrated leftward asymmetry of cortical atrophy consistent with the aphasic phenotype. We also observed abundant inclusions and neurodegeneration in both cortical and subcortical regions, with certain subcortical regions emerging as particularly vulnerable to dystrophic neurites (e.g. amygdala, caudate and putamen). Interestingly, linear mixed models showed that regions with lowest TDP-type C pathology had high neuronal dropout, and conversely, regions with abundant pathology displayed relatively preserved neuronal densities (P

Details

ISSN :
14602156 and 00068950
Volume :
145
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Brain
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....38731e330824c9923764e0cfab07531d