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Tau-Associated Neuronal Loss in the Intermediate Nucleus of the Human Hypothalamus (VLPO Analog): Unveiling the Basis of NREM Sleep Dysfunction in PSP and Alzheimer's Disease

Rastegar-Pouyani, S.; Lew, C.; Pereira, F.; Satpati, A.; Paes, V.; Leite, R. P.; Suemoto, C.; Spina, S.; Seeley, W. W.; Walsh, C.; Neylan, T.; Grinberg, L. T.

2025-03-13 neuroscience
10.1101/2025.03.11.642707 bioRxiv
Show abstract

Sleep disturbances are prevalent in Alzheimers disease (AD) and Progressive Supranuclear Palsy (PSP), often exacerbating disease progression. Understanding the neuropathological basis of these disturbances is essential for identifying potential therapeutic targets. This study investigates the intermediate nucleus (IntN) of the human hypothalamus--a key sleep-regulating region analogous to the rodent ventrolateral preoptic area (VLPO)--to assess neuronal loss and tau pathology in AD and PSP. Using postmortem brain tissue, we applied unbiased stereology to quantify galanin-expressing neurons and phosphorylated tau (p-tau) accumulation. Among 26 cases analyzed, both AD and PSP exhibited significant neuronal loss in the IntN, with PSP showing the most pronounced reduction (84.9% fewer neurons than healthy controls [HC]). In AD, neuronal loss correlated with Braak staging, with late-stage AD cases (Braak 5-6) demonstrating a 76.9% reduction in galanin-expressing neurons compared to HC, while non-galanin neurons exhibited a more moderate decline (45.7%). In PSP, extensive neuronal loss precluded a clear assessment of p-tau burden. These findings suggest a differential neuronal vulnerability to tau pathology across diseases, aligning with distinct sleep disturbances observed in each condition. PSP, characterized by severe insomnia despite preserved wake-promoting neurons, may be explained by the near-total loss of NREM sleep-regulating neurons. In contrast, AD exhibits a progressive decline in both wake- and sleep-promoting neurons, contributing to excessive daytime sleepiness and sleep fragmentation. This study provides critical insights into the selective neuronal vulnerabilities underlying sleep dysfunction in tauopathies, emphasizing the need for targeted interventions to mitigate sleep disturbances in these disorders.

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