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Research work
Disease-related cortical thinning in presymptomatic granulin mutation carriers
Authors
Sónia Afonso
Sarah Anderl-Straub
+120 more
Christin Andersson
Anna Antonell
Silvana Archetti
Andrea Arighi
Mircea Balasa
Nuria Bargallo
Robart Bartha
Benjamin Bender
Sandra Black
Martina Bocchetta
Sergi Borrego-Écija
Barbara Borroni
Jose Bras
Rose Bruffaerts
Chris Butler
Paola Caroppo
David M Cash
Miguel Castelo-Branco
Rhian S Convery
Thomas Cope
Maura Cosseddu
Adrian Danek
Maria de Arriba
Alexandre de Mendonça
Giuseppe Di Fede
Zigor Diaz
Simon Ducharme
Diana Duro
Chiara Fenoglio
Catarina B. Ferreira
Elizabeth Finger
Toby Flanagan
Nick C. Fox
Morris Freedman
Giovanni Frisoni
Giorgio Fumagalli
Alazne Gabilondo
Daniela Galimberti
Roberto Gasparotti
Serge Gauthier
Stefano Gazzina
Alex Gerhard
Giorgio Giaccone
Ana Gorostidi
Caroline Graff
Caroline Greaves
Rita Guerreiro
Carolin Heller
Tobias Hoegen
Begoña Indakoetxea
Vesna Jelic
Maria João Leitão
Ron Keren
Robert Laforce
Johannes Levin
Albert Lladó
Sandra Loosli
Carolina Maruta
Mario Masellis
Simon Mead
Lieke Meeter
Gabriel Miltenberger
Sara Mitchell
Katrina M. Moore
Fermín Moreno
Mollie Neason
Jennifer Nicholas
Jaume Olives
Markus Otto
Alessandro Padovani
Jessica Panman
Janne Papma
Yolande Pijnenburg
Enrico Premi
Sara Prioni
Catharina Prix
Rosa Rademakers
Veronica Redaelli
Timothy Rittman
Ekaterina Rogaeva
Jonathan D. Rohrer
Pedro Rosa-Neto
Maria Rosario Almeida
Giacomina Rossi
Martin N. Rossor
James B. Rowe
Roser Sala-Llonch
Raquel Sanchez-Valle
Isabel Santana
Beatriz Santiago
Elio Scarpini MD
Sonja Schonecker
Elisa Semler
Rachelle Shafei
Christen Shoesmith
Sandro Sorbi
Matthis Synofzik
Miguel Tabuas-Pereira
Fabrizio Tagliavini
Mikel TaintaMD
Ricardo Taipa
David Tang-Wai
Carmela Tartaglia
David L. Thomas
Hakan Thonberg
Carolyn Timberlake
Pietro Tiraboschi
Rick van Minkelen
John van Swieten
Philip Vandamme
Rik Vandenberghe
Mathieu Vandenbulcke
Michele Veldsman
Ana Verdelho
Jorge Villanua
Carlo Wilke
Elisabeth Wlasich
Ione O.C. Woollacott
Miren Zulaica
Linn Öijerstedt
Publication date
1 January 2021
Publisher
'Elsevier BV'
Doi
Abstract
© 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license.Mutations in the granulin gene (GRN) cause familial frontotemporal dementia. Understanding the structural brain changes in presymptomatic GRN carriers would enforce the use of neuroimaging biomarkers for early diagnosis and monitoring. We studied 100 presymptomatic GRN mutation carriers and 94 noncarriers from the Genetic Frontotemporal dementia initiative (GENFI), with MRI structural images. We analyzed 3T MRI structural images using the FreeSurfer pipeline to calculate the whole brain cortical thickness (CTh) for each subject. We also perform a vertex-wise general linear model to assess differences between groups in the relationship between CTh and diverse covariables as gender, age, the estimated years to onset and education. We also explored differences according to TMEM106B genotype, a possible disease modifier. Whole brain CTh did not differ between carriers and noncarriers. Both groups showed age-related cortical thinning. The group-by-age interaction analysis showed that this age-related cortical thinning was significantly greater in GRN carriers in the left superior frontal cortex. TMEM106B did not significantly influence the age-related cortical thinning. Our results validate and expand previous findings suggesting an increased CTh loss associated with age and estimated proximity to symptoms onset in GRN carriers, even before the disease onset.The authors thank all the volunteers for their participation in this study. SBE is a recipient of the Rio-Hortega post-residency grant from the Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Spain. This study was partially funded by Fundació Marató de TV3, Spain (grant no. 20143810 to RSV). The GENFI study has been supported by the Medical Research Council UK, the Italian Ministry of Health and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research as part of a Centres of Excellence in Neurodegeneration grant, as well as other individual funding to investigators. KM has received funding from an Alzheimer’s Society PhD studentship. JDR acknowledges support from the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Queen Square Dementia Biomedical Research Unit and the University College London Hospitals Biomedical Research Centre, the Leonard Wolfson Experimental Neurology Centre, the UK Dementia Research Institute, Alzheimer’s Research UK, the Brain Research Trust and the Wolfson Foundation. JCvS was supported by the Dioraphte Foundation grant 09-02-03-00, the Association for Frontotemporal Dementias Research Grant 2009, The Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) grant HCMI 056-13-018, ZonMw Memorabel (Deltaplan Dementie, project number 733 051 042), Alzheimer Nederland and the Bluefield project. CG have received funding from JPND-Prefrontals VR Dnr 529-2014-7504, VR: 2015-02926, and 2018-02754, the Swedish FTD Initiative-Schörling Foundation, Alzheimer Foundation, Brain Foundation and Stockholm County Council ALF. DG has received support from the EU Joint Programme – Neurodegenerative Disease Research (JPND) and the Italian Ministry of Health (PreFrontALS) grant 733051042. JBR is funded by the Wellcome Trust (103838) and the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre. MM has received funding from a Canadian Institutes of Health Research operating grant and the Weston Brain Institute and Ontario Brain Institute. RV has received funding from the Mady Browaeys Fund for Research into Frontotemporal Dementia. EF has received funding from a CIHR grant #327387. JDR is an MRC Clinician Scientist (MR/M008525/1) and has received funding from the NIHR Rare Diseases Translational Research Collaboration (BRC149/NS/MH), the Bluefield Project and the Association for Frontotemporal Degeneration. MS was supported by a grant 779257 “Solve-RD” from the Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
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