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An immune response characterizes early Alzheimer’s disease pathology and subjective cognitive impairment in hydrocephalus biopsies

Authors :
Deborah Boyett
Elliot H H Youth
Vilas Menon
Xena E. Flowers
Suvrajit Maji
Anne Marie W. Bartosch
Sandra Leskinen
Harrison Xiao
Robert A. McGovern
Guy M. McKhann
Gail Iodice
Andrew F. Teich
Eleonora F Spinazzi
Zeljko Tomljanovic
Wenrui Huang
Source :
Nature Communications, Vol 12, Iss 1, Pp 1-17 (2021), Nature Communications
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Nature Portfolio, 2021.

Abstract

Early Alzheimer’s disease (AD) pathology can be found in cortical biopsies taken during shunt placement for Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus. This represents an opportunity to study early AD pathology in living patients. Here we report RNA-seq data on 106 cortical biopsies from this patient population. A restricted set of genes correlate with AD pathology in these biopsies, and co-expression network analysis demonstrates an evolution from microglial homeostasis to a disease-associated microglial phenotype in conjunction with increasing AD pathologic burden, along with a subset of additional astrocytic and neuronal genes that accompany these changes. Further analysis demonstrates that these correlations are driven by patients that report mild cognitive symptoms, despite similar levels of biopsy β-amyloid and tau pathology in comparison to patients who report no cognitive symptoms. Taken together, these findings highlight a restricted set of microglial and non-microglial genes that correlate with early AD pathology in the setting of subjective cognitive decline.<br />Specific transcriptional changes in microglia associated with Alzheimer’s disease have been reported. Here, the authors show that transcriptional analysis of human hydrocephalus biopsies identifies changes in immune response genes associated with early AD pathology, including cognitive decline.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
12
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fb4340d8668d8260c11b18f977be5844