Abstract

We recently discovered three distinct pathophysiological subtypes in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) using cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) proteomics: one with neuronal hyperplasticity, a second with innate immune system activation, and a third subtype with blood–brain barrier dysfunction. It remains unclear whether AD proteomic subtype profiles are a consequence of amyloid aggregation, or might exist upstream from aggregated amyloid. We studied this question in 127 older individuals with intact cognition and normal AD biomarkers in two independent cohorts (EMIF-AD MBD and ADNI). We clustered 705 proteins measured in CSF that were previously related to AD. We identified in these cognitively intact individuals without AD pathology three subtypes: two subtypes were seen in both cohorts (n = 49 with neuronal hyperplasticity and n = 44 with blood–brain barrier dysfunction), and one only in ADNI (n = 12 with innate immune activation). The proteins specific for these subtypes strongly overlapped with AD subtype protein profiles (overlap coefficients 92%–71%). Longitudinal p181-tau and amyloid β 1–42 (Aβ42) CSF analysis showed that in the hyperplasticity subtype p181-tau increased (β = 2.6 pg/mL per year, p = 0.01) and Aβ42 decreased over time (β = −4.4 pg/mL per year, p = 0.03), in the innate immune activation subtype p181-tau increased (β = 3.1 pg/mL per year, p = 0.01) while in the blood–brain barrier dysfunction subtype Aβ42 decreased (β = −3.7 pg/mL per year, p = 0.009). These findings suggest that AD proteomic subtypes might already manifest in cognitively normal individuals and may predispose for AD before amyloid has reached abnormal levels.

Highlights

  • Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a neurodegenerative disorder and the most common cause of dementia

  • If subtypes would show worsening in delayed memory test scores on the ADAS-Cog delayed word recall subscale, since this measure was most sensitive to decline in a previous study [15]

  • We found mostly higher protein concentrations of cognitively intact individuals with normal AD biomarkers subtype 1 compared to 3, which was consistent with increases observed in the neuronal hyperplasticity compared to the blood–brain barrier dysfunction subtypes in AD (overlap scores of 0.98 in EMIF-AD MBD, and 0.97 in ADNI; (Supplementary Tables S4 and S5a,b)

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Summary

Introduction

Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a neurodegenerative disorder and the most common cause of dementia. The A3 trial will test whether inhibiting beta-secretase 1 (BACE1), which is an enzyme that initiates amyloidogenic processing of the amyloid-precursor protein (APP) [11], may prevent amyloid aggregation in older individuals with normal cognition and normal AD biomarkers (https://clinicaltrials.gov (accessed on 20 May 2021)). For this reason, it is important to increase the understanding of interindividual differences in pathophysiological processes that contribute to disease heterogeneity in Alzheimer’s disease

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