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- Title
Higher CSF Tau Levels Are Related to Hippocampal Hyperactivity and Object Mnemonic Discrimination in Older Adults.
- Authors
Berron, David; Cardenas-Blanco, Arturo; Bittner, Daniel; Metzger, Coraline D.; Spottke, Annika; Heneka, Michael T.; Fliessbach, Klaus; Schneider, Anja; Teipel, Stefan J.; Wagner, Michael; Speck, Oliver; Jessen, Frank; Düzel, Emrah
- Abstract
Mnemonic discrimination, the ability to distinguish similar events in memory, relies on subregions in the human medial temporal lobes (MTLs). Tau pathology is frequently found within the MTL of older adults and therefore likely to affect mnemonic discrimination, even in healthy older individuals. The MTL subregions that are known to be affected early by tau pathology, the perirhinal-transentorhinal region (area 35) and the anterior-lateral entorhinal cortex (alEC), have recently been implicated in the mnemonic discrimination of objects rather than scenes. Here we used an object-scene mnemonic discrimination task in combination with fMRI recordings and analyzed the relationship between subregional MTL activity, memory performance, and levels of total and phosphorylated tau as well as Aβ42/40 ratio in CSF. We show that activity in alEC was associated with mnemonic discrimination of similar objects but not scenes in male and female cognitively unimpaired older adults. Importantly, CSF tau levels were associated with increased fMRI activity in the hippocampus, and both increased hippocampal activity as well as tau levels were associated with mnemonic discrimination of objects, but again not scenes. This suggests that dysfunction of the alEC-hippocampus object mnemonic discrimination network might be a marker for tau-related cognitive decline.
- Subjects
MNEMONICS; OLDER people; ENTORHINAL cortex; TEMPORAL lobe; HYPERACTIVITY
- Publication
Journal of Neuroscience, 2019, Vol 39, Issue 44, p8788
- ISSN
0270-6474
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1279-19.2019