Progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) is a heterogeneous neurodegenerative disease characterised by the accumulation of misfolded 4-repeat tau within neurones and glial cells. There are limited longitu Show more
Progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) is a heterogeneous neurodegenerative disease characterised by the accumulation of misfolded 4-repeat tau within neurones and glial cells. There are limited longitudinal data on pathologically confirmed PSP patients with phenotypes other than classic Richardson's syndrome (RS) and the pathomechanisms responsible for the broad variability in clinical phenotype and progression are not well understood. An unresolved question in this context is whether distinct spatiotemporal patterns of tau pathology propagation exist within the clinicopathological spectrum of PSP. We included 241 consecutive, pathologically confirmed patients with PSP from the Queen Square Brain Bank for Neurological Disorders (2010-2022). Phenotyping was performed based on clinical features present within the first 3 years from symptom onset according to the Movement Disorder Society (MDS) criteria, and specific clinical features and disease milestones were recorded. Genotyping was performed using Illumina NeuroBooster and NeuroChip arrays and MAPT haplotype, APOE genotype, TRIM11 rs564309 and SLC2A13 rs2242367 single nucleotide polymorphism data were collated. Tissue sections from eight brain regions, mounted on glass slides, were immunostained for hyperphosphorylated tau and digitised using whole-slide scanning. Forty-one anatomical regions of interest were manually segmented, and total tau pathology burden was quantified using an automated, machine learning-based algorithm. The associations between survival and both clinicogenetic features and regional tau pathology burden were modelled using Cox regression and generalised linear models, respectively and the Subtype and Stage Inference (SuStaIn) algorithm was used to identify subgroups with distinct progression patterns. We have identified: (i) several clinical predictors of survival in PSP and the relationship between regional tau pathology burden and survival; (ii) novel anatomical reference standards for the expected distribution of tau pathology across MDS-defined PSP phenotypes, including region-specific white matter involvement in patients with corticobasal syndrome and speech/language variants; (iii) associations potentially linking biological sex, MAPT haplotype and TDP-43 co-pathology to clinical phenotype and regional tau pathology burden; (iv) patterns of covariance in regional tau pathology implicating inter-regional connectivity in tau spreading; and (v) three distinct spatiotemporal patterns of tau pathology progression: one characterised by initial involvement of subcortical grey matter followed by rostral spread to cortical regions and two characterised by early, simultaneous involvement of subcortical grey matter and cortical regions. Taken together, these results indicate that PSP clinicopathological heterogeneity is mediated by propagation of tau pathology along anatomically connected networks and via intrinsic regional susceptibility mechanisms, possibly influenced by sex, genetic factors and co-pathology. Show less
Dementia in Lewy body diseases (LBD) is common and arises through heterogeneous and incompletely understood pathways. Evidence suggests contributions from genetic factors, including APOE ε4 genotype, Show more
Dementia in Lewy body diseases (LBD) is common and arises through heterogeneous and incompletely understood pathways. Evidence suggests contributions from genetic factors, including APOE ε4 genotype, co-pathology including concomitant Alzheimer's disease pathology and hypoperfusion related to orthostatic hypotension. However, the relative impact of these factors remains unclear. To address this, we analysed 399 post-mortem brains from LBD cases comprising Parkinson's disease, Parkinson's disease dementia and dementia with Lewy bodies, and controls, integrating APOE genotype, clinical data and assessment of ischaemic pathology alongside large-scale digital pathology quantification. We established an image analysis pipeline utilising machine learning to enable automated, standardised measurement of α-synuclein, amyloid-β, and phosphorylated tau burden across multiple brain regions. Quantitative pathology strongly correlated with semi-quantitative ratings and outperformed conventional staging in predicting dementia. Across multiple analytical approaches, APOE ε3 and ε4 carriers showed distinct dementia risk profiles. APOE ε3 carriers developed dementia at lower quantitative α-synuclein and amyloid-β thresholds than ε4 carriers, although overall dementia risk was dominated by ε4 genotype, consistent with ε4 both promoting greater pathology accumulation and modifying the threshold for dementia onset. Orthostatic hypotension and ischaemic pathology increased dementia risk only in ε3 carriers with low Lewy and Alzheimer's proteinopathy burden, while male sex further modulated dementia risk for this subgroup. The Subtype and Stage Inference (SuStaIn) algorithm identified four trajectories of Lewy pathology progression. Two corresponded to recognised patterns, one brainstem-first and the other with early amygdala and concomitant brainstem involvement. Two further patterns showed early cortical involvement, one with early cingulate cortex involvement together with brainstem pathology and the other starting in neocortex before limbic and brainstem involvement. Co-pathology progression modelling identified subtypes with early predominance of amyloid-β, phosphorylated tau, or α-synuclein, and showed that Lewy subtypes follow two propagation trajectories in opposite directions. Together, these findings demonstrate that integrating quantitative pathology with genotype and clinical data reveals distinct yet overlapping pathways to dementia in LBD, refining disease progression models and providing a basis for genotype- and pathology-informed patient stratification in therapeutic trials. Show less
The Neuronal Ceroid Lipofuscinoses (NCLs) may be considered distinct neurodegenerative disorders with separate underlying molecular causes resulting from monogenetic mutations. An alternative hypothes Show more
The Neuronal Ceroid Lipofuscinoses (NCLs) may be considered distinct neurodegenerative disorders with separate underlying molecular causes resulting from monogenetic mutations. An alternative hypothesis is to consider the NCLs as related diseases that share lipofuscin pathobiology as the common core feature, but otherwise distinguished by different a) initial anatomic location, and b) disease propagation. We have tested this hypothesis by comparing known differences in symptomatology and pathology of the CLN1 phenotype caused by complete loss of Despite displaying similar pathological endpoints, the clinical phenotypes and the evidence of imaging and The propagation of disease in these two NCLs therefore has much in common with the "Brain-first" vs. "Body-first" models of alpha-synuclein propagation in Parkinson's disease. CLN1 disease represents a "Body-first" or bottom-up disease propagation and CLN3 disease having a "Brain-first" and top-down propagation. It is noteworthy that the varied phenotypes of CLN1 disease, whether it starts in infancy (infantile form) or later in childhood (juvenile form), still fit with our proposed hypothesis of a bottom-up disease propagation in CLN1. Likewise, in protracted CLN3 disease, where both cognitive and motor declines are delayed, the initial manifestations of disease are also seen in the outer retinal layers, i.e., identical to classical Juvenile NCL disease. Show less
Neurodegenerative diseases characterized by aberrant accumulation of undigested cellular components represent unmet medical conditions for which the identification of actionable targets is urgently ne Show more
Neurodegenerative diseases characterized by aberrant accumulation of undigested cellular components represent unmet medical conditions for which the identification of actionable targets is urgently needed. Here we identify a pharmacologically actionable pathway that controls cellular clearance via Akt modulation of transcription factor EB (TFEB), a master regulator of lysosomal pathways. We show that Akt phosphorylates TFEB at Ser467 and represses TFEB nuclear translocation independently of mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1), a known TFEB inhibitor. The autophagy enhancer trehalose activates TFEB by diminishing Akt activity. Administration of trehalose to a mouse model of Batten disease, a prototypical neurodegenerative disease presenting with intralysosomal storage, enhances clearance of proteolipid aggregates, reduces neuropathology and prolongs survival of diseased mice. Pharmacological inhibition of Akt promotes cellular clearance in cells from patients with a variety of lysosomal diseases, thus suggesting broad applicability of this approach. These findings open new perspectives for the clinical translation of TFEB-mediated enhancement of cellular clearance in neurodegenerative storage diseases. Show less
Juvenile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (JNCL or CLN3 disease) is an autosomal recessive lysosomal storage disease resulting from mutations in the CLN3 gene that encodes a lysosomal membrane protein. Show more
Juvenile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (JNCL or CLN3 disease) is an autosomal recessive lysosomal storage disease resulting from mutations in the CLN3 gene that encodes a lysosomal membrane protein. The disease primarily affects the brain with widespread intralysosomal accumulation of autofluorescent material and fibrillary gliosis, as well as the loss of specific neuronal populations. As an experimental treatment for the CNS manifestations of JNCL, we have developed a serotype rh.10 adeno-associated virus vector expressing the human CLN3 cDNA (AAVrh.10hCLN3). We hypothesized that administration of AAVrh.10hCLN3 to the Cln3(Δex7/8) knock-in mouse model of JNCL would reverse the lysosomal storage defect, as well as have a therapeutic effect on gliosis and neuron loss. Newborn Cln3(Δex7/8) mice were administered 3 × 10(10) genome copies of AAVrh.10hCLN3 to the brain, with control groups including untreated Cln3(Δex7/8) mice and wild-type littermate mice. After 18 months, CLN3 transgene expression was detected in various locations throughout the brain, particularly in the hippocampus and deep anterior cortical regions. Changes in the CNS neuronal lysosomal accumulation of storage material were assessed by immunodetection of subunit C of ATP synthase, luxol fast blue staining, and periodic acid-Schiff staining. For all parameters, Cln3(Δex7/8) mice exhibited abnormal lysosomal accumulation, but AAVrh.10hCLN3 administration resulted in significant reductions in storage material burden. There was also a significant decrease in gliosis in AAVrh.10hCLN3-treated Cln3(Δex7/8) mice, and a trend toward improved neuron counts, compared with their untreated counterparts. These data demonstrate that AAVrh.10 delivery of a wild-type cDNA to the CNS is not harmful and instead provides a partial correction of the neurological lysosomal storage defect of a disease caused by a lysosomal membrane protein, indicating that this may be an effective therapeutic strategy for JNCL and other diseases in this category. Show less