Longevity & AgingArticle de rechercheAccès libre

New Blood Test Detects Alzheimer's Tau Tangles Better Than Existing Markers

Plasma eMTBR-tau243 outperforms current tau biomarkers in identifying tau tangle pathology and predicting cognitive decline in Alzheimer's disease.

samedi 23 mai 2026 2 vues
Publié dans Nat Med
Glowing tau protein tangles inside a neuron cross-section, rendered in gold and blue, with a blood droplet nearby

Résumé

Researchers identified a novel plasma biomarker called eMTBR-tau243 — an endogenously cleaved fragment of the tau microtubule-binding region — that specifically reflects insoluble tau tangle pathology in Alzheimer's disease. Tested across three cohorts totaling over 900 participants, this blood-based marker strongly correlated with tau-PET imaging and cognitive performance, outperforming existing plasma tau biomarkers like %p-tau217 and %p-tau205. Levels rose significantly at the mild cognitive impairment stage and increased further in dementia. Unlike p-tau181 and p-tau217, which primarily reflect amyloid plaque burden rather than actual tau aggregates, eMTBR-tau243 tracks true tangle pathology, making it potentially valuable for clinical diagnosis, prognosis, and monitoring tau-targeted therapies.

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Résumé détaillé

Tau neurofibrillary tangles are a defining feature of Alzheimer's disease and correlate more closely with clinical symptoms and cognitive decline than amyloid plaques. While tau-PET imaging can detect these aggregates, it requires expensive infrastructure available only at specialized centers. Existing blood and CSF biomarkers such as p-tau181 and p-tau217, though widely used, predominantly reflect amyloid plaque burden and soluble tau phosphorylation — not actual insoluble tau aggregates — limiting their utility for tracking tangle pathology or evaluating tau-directed therapies.

This study introduces plasma eMTBR-tau243, an endogenously cleaved tau peptide from the microtubule-binding region containing residue 243, measured using a highly sensitive mass spectrometry-based assay. The biomarker was developed and validated across three independent cohorts: a discovery cohort (n=108) from Washington University, a replication cohort (n=55), and a large validation cohort (n=739) from Lund University's BioFINDER study. Participants spanned the full Alzheimer's spectrum from cognitively unimpaired amyloid-negative individuals through preclinical AD, MCI, and AD dementia, as well as non-AD cognitive impairment groups.

Plasma eMTBR-tau243 levels were significantly elevated beginning at the MCI stage in amyloid-positive individuals and increased further in those with AD dementia. Crucially, the biomarker showed strong associations with tau-PET binding across Braak regions (β=0.72, R²=0.56), substantially outperforming plasma %p-tau217 (R²=0.44) and %p-tau205 in the same models. Its association with cognitive performance as measured by the Mini-Mental State Examination was also superior (β=0.60, R²=0.40 versus R²=0.28 for %p-tau217). Importantly, eMTBR-tau243 showed weaker associations with amyloid-PET than existing markers, confirming its specificity for tau tangle pathology rather than upstream amyloid changes.

The clinical implications are substantial. Because p-tau species respond to anti-amyloid immunotherapies even when tau aggregates remain unchanged, they are poor monitors for tau-targeted treatments. Plasma eMTBR-tau243, by specifically tracking insoluble tangles, could serve as a pharmacodynamic biomarker in anti-tau clinical trials. It could also help identify symptomatic patients whose cognitive impairment is directly attributable to tau tangle burden — a distinction critical for predicting who will benefit most from anti-amyloid or anti-tau therapies. The blood-based format makes it far more scalable than PET or lumbar puncture-based CSF testing.

Caveats include the assay's current reliance on mass spectrometry, which requires specialized equipment not yet standard in clinical laboratories. Cross-sectional design limits causal inference about longitudinal tangle progression. Validation in more diverse populations and head-to-head comparisons with emerging immunoassay platforms will be needed before widespread clinical adoption.

Principales conclusions

  • Plasma eMTBR-tau243 correlated with tau-PET binding at R²=0.56, outperforming %p-tau217 (R²=0.44).
  • Levels were significantly elevated at MCI stage and rose further in AD dementia across all three cohorts.
  • eMTBR-tau243 showed stronger association with cognitive decline (R²=0.40) than other plasma tau biomarkers.
  • Unlike p-tau217, eMTBR-tau243 is weakly linked to amyloid plaques, confirming specificity for tau tangles.
  • The biomarker was validated in 739 participants across the full Alzheimer's disease clinical spectrum.

Méthodologie

Three cohorts were studied: a discovery cohort (n=108), replication cohort (n=55), and validation cohort (n=739, BioFINDER study). Plasma eMTBR-tau243 was measured using targeted mass spectrometry and compared against tau-PET, amyloid-PET, CSF biomarkers, and cognitive assessments using regression models.

Limites de l'étude

The assay currently depends on mass spectrometry, limiting immediate clinical deployment. The study is cross-sectional, precluding definitive conclusions about longitudinal tangle progression. Replication in ethnically diverse populations and comparison with future immunoassay formats are needed.

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