Beta Amyloid Peptide: Beta Amyloid Peptide: Research Paper : Effect of APOE ε4 on multimodal brain connectomic traits: a persistent homology study

Beta Amyloid Peptide: Research Paper : Effect of APOE ε4 on multimodal brain connectomic traits: a persistent homology study

Effect of APOE ε4 on multimodal brain connectomic traits: a persistent homology study

Abstract

Background: Although genetic risk factors and network-level neuroimaging abnormalities have shown effects on cognitive performance and brain atrophy in Alzheimer's disease (AD), little is understood about how apolipoprotein E (APOE) ε4 allele, the best-known genetic risk for AD, affect brain connectivity before the onset of symptomatic AD. This study aims to investigate APOE ε4 effects on brain connectivity from the perspective of multimodal connectome.

Results: Here, we propose a novel multimodal brain network modeling framework and a network quantification method based on persistent homology for identifying APOE ε4-related network differences. Specifically, we employ sparse representation to integrate multimodal brain network information derived from both the resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI) data and the diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (dw-MRI) data. Moreover, persistent homology is proposed to avoid the ad hoc selection of a specific regularization parameter and to capture valuable brain connectivity patterns from the topological perspective. The experimental results demonstrate that our method outperforms the competing methods, and reasonably yields connectomic patterns specific to APOE ε4 carriers and non-carriers.

Conclusions: We have proposed a multimodal framework that integrates structural and functional connectivity information for constructing a fused brain network with greater discriminative power. Using persistent homology to extract topological features from the fused brain network, our method can effectively identify APOE ε4-related brain connectomic biomarkers.

Keywords: APOE ε4; Alzheimer's disease; Brain network; Persistent homology.

Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

This article originally appeared in the "https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33371873/" and has their copyrights. We do not claim copyright on the content. This information is for research purposes only. This Blog is made available by publishers for educational purposes only as well as to give you general information and a general understanding , not to provide specific advice. By using this blog site you understand that there is no client relationship between you and the Blog publisher. The Blog should not be used as a substitute for competent research advice.  



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