Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThe e4 allele of the Apolipoprotein E gene (APOE) is a well‐established risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease (AD), e4 carriers showing earlier onset and more severe memory impairment than non‐carriers. Neuroimaging evidence suggests that APOEe4 may modulate neural activity in AD since early stages. The purpose of this study was to determine whether APOEe4 influences brain activity in the memory circuit in older cognitively unimpaired individuals.MethodThirty cognitively unimpaired participants (n = 10 APOEe4 heterozygous carriers, age = 65± 5 years, 50% females, MMSE score = 29±1; n = 20 APOEe4 non‐carriers, age = 68±5 years, 35% females, MMSE score = 30±1) were recruited and underwent multidomain (i.e., memory, visuospatial abilities, language, attention) neuropsychological exams and functional MRI scan during an associative memory task, which consisted of two phases: (i) encoding of face‐name associations; (ii) recognition of the name associated to each face. Image preprocessing and voxel‐wise comparisons were conducted using the Statistical Parametric Mapping (SPM, v12). Clusters were considered significant at an uncorrected threshold of p<0.001.ResultParticipants were comparable for demographic and cognitive features (p>0.10) and performed similarly on the in‐scanner face‐name association memory task (p>0.10). Compared to e4 non‐carriers, carriers showed (i) greater activation during the encoding task in the left temporo‐occipital cortex/fusiform gyrus, (ii) greater activation during the recognition task in the middle temporal gyrus/temporo‐occipital cortex bilaterally and in the right cerebellum, and (iii) lower activation during the recognition task in the medial supplementary motor area.ConclusionThese preliminary results confirm that the APOE e4 allele is associated with a different pattern of brain functional activity during an associative memory task in cognitively unimpaired older. Given the similar cognitive performance between groups, higher activation in temporo‐occipital regions might reflect a compensatory process in regions vulnerable to AD pathology.

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