Samenvatting
White matter (WM) alterations have been observed in Huntington disease (HD) but their role in the disease-pathophysiology remains unknown. We assessed WM changes in premanifest HD by exploiting ultra-strong-gradient magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). This allowed to separately quantify magnetization transfer ratio (MTR) and hindered and restricted diffusion-weighted signal fractions, and assess how they drove WM microstructure differences between patients and controls. We used tractometry to investigate region-specific alterations across callosal segments with well-characterized early- and late-myelinating axon populations, while brain-wise differences were explored with tract-based cluster analysis (TBCA). Behavioral measures were included to explore disease-associated brain-function relationships. We detected lower MTR in patients' callosal rostrum (tractometry: p =.03; TBCA: p =.03), but higher MTR in their splenium (tractometry: p =.02). Importantly, patients' mutation-size and MTR were positively correlated (all p-values <.01), indicating that MTR alterations may directly result from the mutation. Further, MTR was higher in younger, but lower in older patients relative to controls (p =.003), suggesting that MTR increases are detrimental later in the disease. Finally, patients showed higher restricted diffusion signal fraction (FR) from the composite hindered and restricted model of diffusion (CHARMED) in the cortico-spinal tract (p =.03), which correlated positively with MTR in the posterior callosum (p =.033), potentially reflecting compensatory mechanisms. In summary, this first comprehensive, ultra-strong gradient MRI study in HD provides novel evidence of mutation-driven MTR alterations at the premanifest disease stage which may reflect neurodevelopmental changes in iron, myelin, or a combination of these.
| Originele taal-2 | Engels |
|---|---|
| Pagina's (van-tot) | 3439-3460 |
| Aantal pagina's | 22 |
| Tijdschrift | Human Brain Mapping |
| Volume | 43 |
| Nummer van het tijdschrift | 11 |
| DOI's | |
| Status | Gepubliceerd - 1 aug. 2022 |
| Extern gepubliceerd | Ja |
Bibliografische nota
Publisher Copyright:© 2022 The Authors. Human Brain Mapping published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.
Financiering
The present research was funded by a Wellcome Trust PhD studentship to CC (ref: 204005/Z/16/Z). For the purpose of Open Access, the author has applied a CC‐BY public copyright license to any Author Accepted Manuscript version arising from this submission. Derek K. Jones was supported by a New Investigator Award (to Derek K. Jones) from the Wellcome Trust (ref: 096646/Z/11/Z) and a Strategic Award from the Wellcome Trust (ref: 104943/Z/14/Z). The authors thank Dr Slawomir Kusmia and Dr Elena Kleban for their support with the project.
| Financiers | Financiernummer |
|---|---|
| Wellcome Trust | 096646/Z/11/Z, 104943/Z/14/Z, 204005/Z/16/Z |
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