Study shows Alzheimer’s Disease may spread
by ‘Jumping’ from one Brain Region to
another;
Findings open new opportunities for studying
Alzheimer’s and testing potential therapies
Newswise — New York, NY (February 5, 2012) —
For decades, researchers have debated
whether Alzheimer’s disease starts
independently in vulnerable brain regions at
different times, or if it begins in one
region and then spreads to neuroanatomically
connected areas.
A new study by Columbia University Medical
Center (CUMC) researchers strongly supports
the latter, demonstrating that abnormal tau
protein, a key feature of the
neurofibrillary tangles seen in the brains
of those with Alzheimer’s, propagates along
linked brain circuits, “jumping” from neuron
to neuron.
The findings, published today in the online
journal PloS One, open new
opportunities for gaining a greater
understanding of Alzheimer’s disease and
other neurological diseases and for
developing therapies to halt its
progression, according to senior author
Karen E. Duff, PhD, professor of pathology
(in psychiatry and in the Taub Institute for
Research on Alzheimer’s Disease and the
Aging Brain) at CUMC and at the New York
State Psychiatric Institute.
Alzheimer’s disease, the most common form of
dementia, is characterized by the
accumulation of plaques (composed of
amyloid-beta protein) and fibrous tangles
(composed of abnormal tau) in brain cells
called neurons. Postmortem studies of human
brains and neuroimaging studies have
suggested that the disease, especially the
neurofibrillary tangle pathology, begins in
the entorhinal cortex, which plays a key
role in memory. Then as Alzheimer’s
progresses, the disease appears in
anatomically linked higher brain regions.
“Earlier research, including functional MRI
studies in humans, have also supported this
pattern of spread,” said study coauthor
Scott A. Small, MD, professor of neurology
in the Sergievsky Center and in the Taub
Institute for Research on Alzheimer’s
Disease and the Aging Brain at CUMC. “But
these various findings do not definitively
show that Alzheimer’s spreads directly from
one brain region to another.”
To look further into this issue, the CUMC
researchers developed a novel transgenic
mouse in which the gene for abnormal human
tau is expressed predominantly in the
entorhinal cortex. The brains of the mice
were analyzed at different time points over
22 months to map the spread of abnormal tau
protein.
The researchers found that as the mice aged,
the abnormal human tau spread along a linked
anatomical pathway, from the entorhinal
cortex to the hippocampus to the neocortex.
“This pattern very much follows the staging
that we see at the earliest stages of human
Alzheimer’s disease,” said Dr. Duff.
The researchers also found evidence
suggesting that the abnormal tau protein was
moving from neuron to neuron across
synapses, the junctions that these cells use
to communicate with each other.
The findings of the study have important
implications for therapy.
"If, as our data suggest, tau pathology
starts in the entorhinal cortex and emanates
from there, the most effective approach may
be to treat Alzheimer’s the way we treat
cancer—through early detection and
treatment, before it has a chance to
spread,” said Dr. Small. “The best way to
cure Alzheimer’s may be to identify and
treat it when it is just beginning, to halt
progression. It is during this early stage
that the disease will be most amenable to
treatment. That is the exciting clinical
promise down the road.”
Treatments could conceivably target tau
during it extracellular phase, as it moves
from cell to cell, added Dr. Duff. “If we
can find the mechanism by which tau spreads
from one cell to another, we could
potentially stop it from jumping across the
synapses — perhaps using some type of
immunotherapy. This would prevent the
disease from spreading to other regions of
the brain, which is associated with more
severe dementia.”