Abstract

The spatial correlations between the brain's default mode network (DMN) and the brain regions known to develop pathophysiology in Alzheimer's disease (AD) have recently attracted much attention. In this paper, we compare results of different functional and structural imaging modalities, including MRI and PET, and highlight different patterns of anomalies observed within the DMN. Multitracer PET imaging in subjects with and without dementia has demonstrated that [C-11]PIB- and [F-18]FDDNP-binding patterns in patients with AD overlap within nodes of the brain's default network including the prefrontal, lateral parietal, lateral temporal, and posterior cingulate cortices, with the exception of the medial temporal cortex (especially, the hippocampus) where significant discrepancy between increased [F-18]FDDNP binding and negligible [C-11]PIB-binding was observed. [F-18]FDDNP binding in the medial temporal cortex—a key constituent of the DMN—coincides with both the presence of amyloid and tau pathology, and also with cortical areas with maximal atrophy as demonstrated by T1-weighted MR imaging of AD patients.

1. Introduction

In 2001, the default mode network (DMN) was first proposed as an interconnected set of brain regions that is active when the brain is in a resting state and typically deactivated during memory encoding and other cognitively demanding tasks focused on processing of external stimuli [1]. The DMN includes the dorsal and ventral medial prefrontal cortices, medial and lateral parietal cortex, and parts of the medial and lateral temporal cortices.

It has been suggested that the DMN consists of two subsystems that converge on two core regions: anterior medial prefrontal cortex and posterior cingulate cortex. The two subsystems, dorsal medial prefrontal cortex subsystem (consisting of dorsal medial prefrontal cortex, temporoparietal junction, lateral temporal cortex, and temporal pole) and medial temporal cortical subsystem (consisting of ventral medial prefrontal cortex, posterior inferior parietal lobule, retrosplenial cortex, parahippocampal cortex, and hippocampal formation) may be activated simultaneously or separately during these tasks [2]. Tasks during which the DMN is activated include, among others, autobiographical memory, thinking about one’s future, theory of mind, self-referential and affective decision-making [2].

Alzheimer’s disease (AD) affects many aspects of cognitive function, in particular memory, attention, visuospatial orientation, and language. These changes in multiple domains point to widespread abnormalities in brain circuitry at more advanced stages of disease [3]. Early symptomatology of AD has been linked to changes in the default mode network based on glucose metabolism and blood flow PET and SPECT measurements and later with fMRI experiments (reviewed by [4]). As a result, the default network rapidly became the target of extensive research in the AD field [49]. In addition to extensive cortical neuronal loss, AD is also defined by the presence of brain amyloid pathology (amyloid plaques) and tau pathology (neurofibrillary tangles) [10, 11], postmortem detection of which is required for the definitive diagnosis of AD.

In this paper, we compare results of different functional and structural imaging modalities used in AD imaging including T1-wighted MR imaging, fMRI, 2-deoxy-2-[F-18]fluoro-D-glucose ([F-18]FDG)-PET, 6-hydroxy-2-(4'-([C-11]methylamino)phenyl)benzothiazole ([C-11]PIB)-PET, and 2-(1-{6-[(2-[F-18]fluoroethyl)(methyl)amino]-2-naphthyl}ethylidene)malononitrile ([F-18]FDDNP)-PET imaging from the perspective of the brain’s DMN. Imaging results across imaging modalities probing different pathophysiological changes in AD show different patterns of anomalies observed within the DMN. For example, declines in [F-18]FDG PET measures of glucose metabolism in posterior cingulate gyrus at the earliest presymptomatic stages of AD and progression to parietal and lateral temporal cortices in mild AD [12] were early observed, yet these functional changes cannot be attributed only to cortical atrophy in these regions, but also to deficits in neuronal projections resulting from pathology deposition and neuronal degeneration in the medial temporal cortex [13]. This is also shown in the effect of entorhinal and rhinal lesioning on posterior cingulate regional cerebral glucose utilization in baboons [14]. Robust atrophy as well as significantly increased [F-18]FDDNP binding was found within the medial temporal cortex and other parietal and temporal regions at early stages of AD [1518]. [F-18]FDDNP is the first PET molecular imaging probe successfully applied for in vivo visualization of Alzheimer’s disease pathology in the brain of living AD patients with a pattern of increased binding in the brain areas known to contain both amyloid plaques and neurofibrillary tangles [13, 16, 19, 20]. These brain areas include medial temporal and lateral temporal cortices, posterior cingulate gyrus, parietal and frontal cortices, all of which are involved in the DMN. Similarly several studies have correlated [C-11]PIB binding with the anatomical substrates of the DMN [4, 2123] and have found increased [C-11]PIB binding in several, but not all, DMN brain regions. Recently, multitracer PET imaging using both [F-18]FDDNP and [C-11]PIB in the same subjects with and without dementia have provided important information on clear and meaningful similarities and differences in topographical distribution between [C-11]PIB-PET and [F-18]FDDNP-PET images [2427].

2. Emergence of the Default Mode Network

Raichle, Gusnard, and colleagues introduced the concept of DMN with three fMRI papers in 2001 [1, 28, 29]. Their papers directly considered the empirical and theoretical implications of defining baseline states and what the specific pattern of activity in the default mode network might represent [4]. Prior to the availability of fMRI the activation studies using [O-15]H2O PET (and other perfusion agents) have been used to study activity patterns of the brain in the resting state. Figure 1 shows the common, default mode activity in young adults measured by [O-15]H2O PET (see [4, 21, 30] for detail). These results point to a wide network of regions activated in the default state and includes the precuneus (the portion of the parietal cortex caudal to the paracentral lobule) extending into posterior cingulate and retrosplenial cortex, as well as inferior lateral parietal regions, frontal regions along the midline, medial, and temporal cortex [4, 21, 3133].

3. Disruption of the Default Network in AD

3.1. MRI Measures of Atrophy

A variety of pathological processes including neuronal loss, synaptic loss, and loss of projections contribute to gray matter atrophy which spreads across the brain in AD with the disease progression disrupting neuronal circuits involved in the DMN prominently including the medial temporal cortex [17, 21, 22, 34, 35]. The temporal trajectory of cortical atrophy was studied by Whitwell et al. [18] in a longitudinal MRI study of atrophy in amnestic MCI (aMCI) subjects who progressed to AD. The initial pattern of grey matter loss in the aMCI subject scans 3 years prior to the diagnosis of AD was focused primarily in the medial temporal cortex, including the amygdala, anterior hippocampus and entorhinal cortex, with some additional involvement of the fusiform gyrus,. The extent and magnitude of cerebral atrophy in these patients further progressed over the following two years with atrophy in the medial temporal cortex spreading to middle temporal gyrus, and extended into more posterior regions of the temporal cortex to include the entire extent of the hippocampus and partial involvement of the parietal cortex. By the time the subjects had progressed to a clinical diagnosis of AD the pattern of grey matter atrophy had become more widespread with more severe involvement of the medial temporal cortex and the temporoparietal association cortices and, for the first time, substantial involvement of the frontal cortex (see Figure 2).

Accelerated atrophy is also observed in the posterior cingulate gyrus, one of the core regions of DMN [2] and an area with the earliest decline in glucose utilization in the preclinical stages of AD [12]. This implies that the early functional abnormalities and structural changes of neuronal circuitry in the default mode network only involve a subset of DMN core regions [4, 21] to progress later to other areas of the network.

3.2. Functional MRI

Recently, functional changes in the default mode network have been explored with fMRI in AD using both analysis of task-induced deactivation [36, 37] and analysis of intrinsic activity correlations [33, 3739].

Thus, by all measures the default mode network appears disrupted in AD, including prominently the medial temporal cortex subsystem and posterior cingulate area [4].

4. PET Imaging of Amyloidosis and Tauopathy in AD

4.1. [F-18]FDDNP-PET in AD

Beta-amyloid plaques and neurofibrillary tangles are the two most common neuropathological hallmarks of Alzheimer’s disease and they appear in distinctive progressive temporal and spatial patterns of cortical pathology evolution during the disease progression [11]. [F-18]FDDNP is known to bind to amyloid plaques as well as neurofibrillary tangles in vitro [20]. Post mortem neuropathological studies of AD patients who previously received [F-18]FDDNP-PET scans show close matching of in vitro immunohistochemical determined pattern of plaque and tangle distribution in the brain regions with imaging results [16]. [F-18]FDDNP PET-binding patterns of subjects with mild cognitive impairment and AD patients [16] is progressive. Initially increased medial temporal cortex binding in controls at risk and MCI subjects is followed by a variable and progressive pattern of binding in one or more of other cortical areas including posterior cingulate gyrus. In contrast, more advanced AD patients had a pattern of elevated [F-18]FDDNP binding in prefrontal, parietal, posterior cingulate, lateral temporal and medial temporal cortices areas [15, 16, 24]. These results in living humans clearly point at the medial temporal cortex as being the area with the earliest pathological lesion formation which is in accordance with neuropathology findings [11]. Figure 3 shows three-dimensional cortical surface projection images of [F-18]FDDNP-PET scans from a representative patient with AD.

4.2. [C-11]PIB-PET in AD

PET imaging studies with [C-11]PIB, which has been suggested to bind to amyloid plaques only [40, 41], show a single pattern of [C-11]PIB binding in the prefrontal, lateral parietal, posterior cingulate, lateral temporal cortices and precuneus [40] at all levels of cognitive impairment, including AD, a subset of MCI subjects and even some cognitively normal controls. This pattern of [C-11]PIB cortical uptake was correlated with the DMN by Buckner et al. [21] who noticed overlap of DMN and [C-11]PIB-binding pattern in cortical areas with exception of the medial temporal cortex which include both hippocampus and parahippocampal gyrus (see Figure 4). When compared with the patterns of known beta-amyloid deposition in AD [11, 42, 43], this lack of [C-11]PIB binding in the hippocampus and neocortical areas of medial temporal cortex (entorhinal, parahippocampal, rhinal, and perirhinal cortices) points to the most significant mismatch between beta-amyloid pathology and [C-11]PIB binding. Indeed multiple contradictory [C-11]PIB-binding results in humans have been reported [44] and recent work demonstrating that [C-11]PIB brain accumulation may be at least in part mediated by [C-11]PIB sulfation via estrogen sulfotransferase [45] has cast doubts on the purported human amyloid specificity of [C-11]PIB.

It may be possible that other factors, like cortical atrophy and/or low distribution of amyloid aggregates may contribute to the underestimation of [C-11]PIB accumulation in medial temporal lobe (MTL). Indeed, topographical differences in the distribution of senile plaques (SP) and neurofibrillary tangles (NFT) have been noted in AD, with lower densities of SP in limbic areas of MTL, such as hippocampus and subiculum, which are more affected by neurofibrillary tangle pathology [10]. Yet in other areas of medial temporal lobe, such as entorhinal, perirhinal, and rhinal cortices as well as parahippocampal gyrus, β-amyloid plaque densities (both diffuse and neuritic plaques) reach levels observed in lateral temporal lobe and other cortical areas even in subjects without clinically manifested dementia and only limited atrophy [43]. Thus, even though some partial volume effects are expected, it is unlikely that [C-11]PIB negligible binding in MTL at all levels of cognitive impairment is entirely due to the combined effects of low β-amyloid plaque densities and atrophy. If so, one would also expect a similar drastic effect of MTL atrophy with the [F-18]FDDNP signal in the same patients, and this is not observed (Figures 5 and 6).

5. [F-18]FDDNP- and [C-11]PIB-PET Comparison in the Same AD Patients

Postmortem pathological studies of AD brains demonstrated that the distribution of neuritic plaques may present significant intersubject variability. [10, 11]. To minimize this effect and to compare more accurately binding patterns of both imaging probes, comparison of [F-18]FDDNP and [C-11]PIB binding in the same AD subjects is necessary. Recently, a comparative multitracer PET imaging study using both [F-18]FDDNP and [C-11]PIB has been performed in control subjects and patients with AD [24, 25]. These studies demonstrate that in AD both probes show widespread cortical uptake within the areas of the DMN including the prefrontal cortex, lateral parietal, lateral temporal cortex, and posterior cingulate cortices (Figure 5). However, these studies also demonstrate the critical difference between [C-11]PIB and [F-18]FDDNP binding in the medial temporal cortex, where [F-18]FDDNP is high and [C-11]PIB binding is negligible in the same AD subjects.

To highlight the different binding pattern of [F-18]FDDNP and [C-11]PIB in the medial temporal cortex, the subtracted PET imaging of [F-18]FDDNP minus [C-11]PIB in the same subjects with AD was calculated. Figure 6 demonstrates that the medial temporal cortex was the most significant differential brain region in the voxel mapping of the subtracted PET imaging.

6. Default Mode Network and Medial Temporal Cortex

One has to approach with cautious interpretation of imaging data across the modalities in DMN since comparing activity with structural changes may lead to erroneous conclusions regarding AD and its progression. Resting state fMRI, [O-15]H2O PET, and [F-18]FDG PET give us information about the activity of DMN during a variety of thought processes considered as resting state in healthy subjects and in AD patients. Functional changes in specific DMN nodes may result from the pathology present in the nodes themselves or can reflect pathological changes in connectivity of the circuits leading to and from the specific node. It is not surprising that neuropathological structural changes present at early stages of AD evolution (MRI atrophy in the medial temporal cortex) may not overlap with functional changes entirely ([F-18]FDG decline in posterior cingulate gyrus). [F-18]FDG decline does reflect changes in functional activity of neuronal terminals (i.e., in posterior cingulate gyrus) caused by neuropathology in their cell bodies (i.e., in hippocampus and other medial temporal cortex substructures).

Comparison of [F-18]FDDNP and [C-11]PIB-binding patterns at early stages and late stages of AD shows stark difference between the immutable pattern of [C-11]PIB-binding patterns [46] and evolution of [F-18]FDDNP-binding with disease progression from initial localization in the medial temporal cortex to the widespread cortical pattern found in AD as expected from autopsy determinations. If one accepts the hypothesis that [C-11]PIB-binding reflects the level of beta-amyloid plaques in vivo then the obvious lack of [C-11]PIB-binding to the medial temporal cortex, an area with early and abundant deposition of amyloid plaques [11, 43] raises the question about the validity of this hypothesis. Although correlation of [C-11]PIB-binding pattern in AD and increased levels of regional consumption of glucose via glycolysis have been noted, there was poor correlation between the total level of glucose utilization (indicative of the remaining cell density and their functional activity in the affected areas) and the levels of [C-11]PIB-binding. Longitudinal [C-11]PIB and [F-18]FDG PET studies in AD [47, 48] have shown progressive cortical metabolic decline, as measured with [F-18]FDG, in parallel with cognitive function, but no significant changes in [C-11]PIB binding levels or binding pattern over time were observed.

Early pathology observations have revealed that AD affects only a subset of neurons in regional and laminar specific neuronal systems [49] and that AD is a disconnection syndrome with damage to the entorhinal cortex and/or subiculum which effectively disconnects hippocampal formation from the rest of the neocortex. Subsequent progression of the disease occurs in a stepwise fashion along cortico-cortical connections [50]. Large cross-sectional studies have revealed that cortical neurofibrillary tangle densities and not amyloid deposits are the best correlates of the severity of dementia, neuronal loss, and atrophy [51].

These pathology observations support the hypothesis that DMN and its subsystems are affected early in AD with neurofibrillary tangles, neuronal loss, and atrophy in the medial temporal cortex and earliest metabolic changes in posterior cingulate area. Both areas are highly connected with other cortical and subcortical regions and are thus excellent starting points for spread of pathological changes as hypothesized by de Lacourte and White III [50].

7. Conclusions

The spatial correlations between the brain’s default mode network and previously known AD pathophysiology patterns have become more evident with the advances in functional structural imaging techniques. Furthermore, development of PET molecular imaging probes also makes it possible to assess in vivo distribution of AD pathology within the default mode network activity in living AD patients. Atrophy measurements, [F-18]FDG PET and [F-18]FDDNP PET studies point to the medial temporal cortex and posterior cingulate gyrus as two areas of DMN with the earliest pathological and functional changes. Cross-sectional PET studies show initial [F-18]FDDNP binding in the medial temporal cortex and spreading stepwise to the other areas of DMN. [C-11]PIB determinations reveal a single pattern of binding within DMN which does not include the medial temporal cortex. This pattern is present in on-off fashion in control and MCI subjects [46]. Multitracer PET imaging determinations using both [F-18]FDDNP and [C-11]PIB in the same subjects, with and without AD showed overlaps between [C-11]PIB-binding patterns and [F-18]FDDNP binding patterns within the brain’s default mode network. However, it also demonstrated a critical discrepancy found in the medial temporal cortex where [F-18]FDDNP binding is the highest but [C-11]PIB binding is negligible. Moreover, while [F-18]FDDNP shows the expected pattern of disease progression, [C-11]PIB shows uniform patterns of distribution throughout the DMN at various stages of disease evolution. Because marked AD pathology (demonstrated by postmortem histopathology) and atrophy (demonstrated by T1-weighted MR imaging) have their earliest manifestation in the medial temporal cortex, [C-11]PIB binding in the DMN is inconsistent with its purported specificity for beta-amyloid aggregates.

Acknowledgments

This paper is supported by NIH Grants P01-AG024831 and DOE contract DE-FC03-87-ER60615. The University of California, Los Angeles, owns the U.S. patent (6,274,119) entitled “Methods for Labeling Beta-Amyloid Plaques and Neurofibrillary Tangles.” Drs. G. W. Small and J. R. Barrio are among the inventors. Dr. Barrio gratefully acknowledges the support of the Elizabeth and Thomas Plott Chair Endowment in Gerontology.