학술논문

Network mediation of pathology pattern in sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease.
Document Type
article
Source
Brain communications. 2(1)
Subject
Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease
MRI
network diffusion
prion
structural connectivity
Brain Disorders
Rare Diseases
Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathy (TSE)
Neurosciences
Biomedical Imaging
Neurodegenerative
Dementia
Acquired Cognitive Impairment
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Neurological
Language
Abstract
Sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease is a rare fatal rapidly progressive dementia caused by the accumulation and spread of pathologically misfolded prions. Evidence from animal models and in vitro experiments suggests that prion pathology propagates along neural connectivity pathways, with the transmission of misfolded prions initiating a corruptive templating process in newly encountered brain regions. Although particular regional patterns of disease have been recognized in humans, the underlying mechanistic basis of these patterns remains poorly understood. Here, we demonstrate that the spatial pattern of disease derived from publicly available human diffusion-weighted MRI data demonstrates stereotypical features across patient cohorts and can be largely explained by intrinsic connectivity properties of the human structural brain network. Regional diffusion-weighted MRI signal abnormalities are predicted by graph theoretical measures of centrality, with highly affected regions such as cingulate gyrus demonstrating strong structural connectivity to other brain regions. We employ network diffusion modelling to demonstrate that the spatial pattern of disease can be predicted by a diffusion process originating from a single regional pathology seed and operating on the structural connectome. The most likely seeds correspond to the most highly affected brain regions, suggesting that pathological prions could originate in a single brain region and spread throughout the brain to produce the regional distribution of pathology observed on MRI. Further investigation of top seed regions and associated connectivity pathways may be a useful strategy for developing therapeutic approaches.