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  3. Synaptic loss pattern is constrained by brain connectome and modulated by phosphorylated tau in Alzheimer's disease.
 

Synaptic loss pattern is constrained by brain connectome and modulated by phosphorylated tau in Alzheimer's disease.

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BORIS DOI
10.48620/89466
Publisher DOI
10.1038/s41467-025-61497-4
PubMed ID
40640137
Description
Synaptic loss strongly correlates with cognitive impairment in Alzheimer's disease (AD), yet the mechanism linking its origin and pattern remain unclear. Given that connected brain regions share molecular and synaptic features, and pathological tau, a key driver of synaptic degeneration, propagates through brain networks, we hypothesize that network architecture may influence synaptic loss in AD. By combining synaptic vesicle glycoprotein 2 A (SV2A) PET in 91 AD patients and 54 controls with normative connectome data, we show strongly connected regions exhibit similar levels of synaptic loss, and synaptic loss in one region is associated with connectivity-weighted synaptic loss in connected regions. Regions strongly connected to the epicenter show greater and faster synaptic loss. Plasma p-tau181 levels correlate with network-constrained synaptic loss, and post-mortem data confirm reduced SV2A expression in tau-rich areas. These findings support that synaptic vulnerability in AD is partially constrained by network topology and is modulated by phosphorylated tau.
Date of Publication
2025-07-10
Publication Type
Article
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Luan, Ying
Wang, Weiyi
Huang, Qi
Wang, Yan
Nussbaumer, Jana
Wang, Jie
Steward, Anna
Roemer-Cassiano, Sebastian N
Guan, Yihui
Ewers, Michael
Schöll, Michael
Ni, Ruiqingorcid-logo
Clinic of Nuclear Medicine
Li, Binyin
Franzmeier, Nicolai
Xie, Fang
Additional Credits
Clinic of Nuclear Medicine
Series
Nature Communications
Publisher
Nature Research
ISSN
2041-1723
Access(Rights)
open.access
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