4.8 Article

Blood-brain barrier breakdown is an early biomarker of human cognitive dysfunction

Journal

NATURE MEDICINE
Volume 25, Issue 2, Pages 270-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41591-018-0297-y

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01AG023084, R01NS090904, R01NS034467, R01AG039452, 1R01NS100459, 5P01AG052350, 5P50AG005142, 509279]
  2. Cure Alzheimer's Fund
  3. Foundation Leducq Transatlantic Network of Excellence [16 CVD 05]
  4. L.K. Whittier Foundation [P01AG052350, RO1AG054434, R01AG055770]
  5. NIH [5P50AG005142, R21AG055034, P50AG05681, P01AG03991, P01AG026276]
  6. Alzheimer's Association [AARG-17-532905]

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Vascular contributions to cognitive impairment are increasingly recognized1-5 as shown by neuropathological(6,7), neuroimaging(4,8-11), and cerebrospinal fluid biomarker(4,12) studies. Moreover, small vessel disease of the brain has been estimated to contribute to approximately 50% of all dementias worldwide, including those caused by Alzheimer's disease (AD)(3,4,13). Vascular changes in AD have been typically attributed to the vasoactive and/or vasculotoxic effects of amyloid-beta (A beta)(3,11,14), and more recently tau(15). Animal studies suggest that A beta and tau lead to blood vessel abnormalities and blood-brain barrier (BBB) breakdown(14-16). Although neurovascular dysfunction(3,11) and BBB breakdown develop early in AD(1,4,5,8-10,12,13), how they relate to changes in the AD classical biomarkers A beta and tau, which also develop before dementia(17), remains unknown. To address this question, we studied brain capillary damage using a novel cerebrospinal fluid biomarker of BBB-associated capillary mural cell pericyte, soluble platelet-derived growth factor receptor-beta(8,18), and regional BBB permeability using dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging(8-10). Our data show that individuals with early cognitive dysfunction develop brain capillary damage and BBB breakdown in the hippocampus irrespective of Alzheimer's A beta and/or tau biomarker changes, suggesting that BBB breakdown is an early biomarker of human cognitive dysfunction independent of A beta and tau.

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