SuperAger Brains Yield New Clues To Their Remarkable Memories

By

Northwestern Medicine scientists found super aged brains had many fewer fiber-like tangles than the brains of those who had aged normally. Tangles are found in moderate numbers in the brains of elderly and increase substantially in the brains of Alzheimer’s disease patients.

SuperAgers, aged 80 and above, have distinctly different looking brains than those of normal older people, according to new Northwestern Medicine research that is beginning to reveal why the memories of these cognitively elite elders don’t suffer the usual ravages of time.

SuperAgers have memories that are as sharp as those of healthy persons decades younger.

Understanding their unique “brain signature” will enable scientists to decipher the genetic or molecular source and may foster the development of strategies to protect the memories of normal aging persons as well as treat dementia.

Published Jan. 28 in the Journal of Neuroscience, the study is the first to quantify brain differences between SuperAgers and normal older people.

Cognitive SuperAgers were first identified in 2007 by scientists at Northwestern’s Cognitive Neurology and Alzheimer’s Disease Center (CNADC).

Their unusual brain signature has three common components when compared with normal persons of similar ages: a thicker region of the cortex; significantly fewer tangles (a primary marker of Alzheimer’s disease) and a whopping supply of a specific kind of neuron – von Economo neurons – linked to higher social intelligence.

“The brains of the SuperAgers are either wired differently or have structural differences when compared to normal individuals of the same age,” said Changiz Geula, PhD, study senior author and a research professor in the CNADC. “It may be one factor, such as expression of a specific gene, or a combination of factors that offers protection.”

The Center has a new NIH grant to continue the research.

“Identifying the factors that contribute to the SuperAgers’ unusual memory capacity may allow us to offer strategies to help the growing population of ‘normal’ elderly maintain their cognitive function and guide future therapies to treat certain dementias,” said Tamar Gefen, the first study author and a clinical neuropsychology doctoral candidate at Feinberg.

MRI imaging and an analysis of the SuperAger brains after death show the following brain signature:

1) MRI imaging showed the anterior cingulate cortex of SuperAgers (31 subjects) was not only significantly thicker than the same area in aged individuals with normal cognitive performance (21 subjects), but also larger than the same area in a group of much younger, middle-aged individuals (ages 50 to 60, 18 subjects). This region is indirectly related to memory through its influence on related functions such as cognitive control, executive function, conflict resolution, motivation and perseverance.

2) Analysis of the brains of five SuperAgers showed the anterior cingulate cortex had approximately 87 percent less tangles than age-matched controls and 92 percent less tangles than individuals with mild cognitive impairment. The neurofibrillary brain tangles, twisted fibers consisting of the protein tau, strangle and eventually kill neurons.

3) The number of von Economo neurons was approximately three to five times higher in the anterior cingulate of SuperAgers compared with age-matched controls and individuals with mild cognitive impairment.

“It’s thought that these von Economo neurons play a critical role in the rapid transmission of behaviorally relevant information related to social interactions,” Geula said, “which is how they may relate to better memory capacity.” These cells are present in such species as whales, elephants, dolphins and higher apes.

Other Feinberg faculty authors on the study include Emily Rogalski, PhD, research associate professor in the CNADC, Alfred Rademaker, PhD, professor in Preventive Medicine-Biostatistics, Eileen Bigio, MD, Paul E. Steiner Research Professor of PathologySandra Weintraub, PhD, professor in Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences and Neurology – Ken and Ruth Davee Department, and M. Marsel Mesulam, MD, director of the CNADC and Ruth Dunbar Davee Professor in Neuroscience.

The research was funded by National Institute on Aging, National Institutes of Health grant AG045571, The Davee Foundation, the Northwestern University Alzheimer’s Disease Core Center grant AG13854 from the National Institute on Aging, a fellowship from the National Institute on Aging grant F31-AG043270 and others.

For more information on the SuperAger study, call 312-503-2716 or email agingresearch@northwestern.edu.

If you are interested in participating in research at Northwestern University, please call the NU Study line at 1-855-NU-STUDY. Or get connected by visiting http://registries.northwestern.edu to sign up for Northwestern’s Research Registry.