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Grants > Shining a Light on How Early Tau-Related Brain Changes Affect Memory Loss Updated On: Ene. 20, 2025
Alzheimer's Disease Research Grant

Shining a Light on How Early Tau-Related Brain Changes Affect Memory Loss

Biomarkers
a headshot of Dr. Dahl

Principal Investigator

Martin Dahl, PhD 

Max Planck Institute for Human Development

Berlin, Germany

About the Research Project

Program

Alzheimer's Disease Research

Award Type

Postdoctoral Fellowship

Award Amount

$199,130

Active Dates

July 01, 2024 - June 30, 2026

Grant ID

A2024006F

Mentor(s)

Ulman Lindenberger, PhD, Max Planck Institute for Human Development

Goals

This project delves into the brainstem’s role in early tau accumulation and memory loss via advanced magnetic resonance imaging, plasma biomarkers, and long-term data, enhancing our understanding of Alzheimer’s progression.

Summary

This project spotlights previously understudied brain regions—tiny nuclei in the brainstem—that are the starting point of Alzheimer’s-related tau accumulation and investigates how their changes contribute to memory loss. Using innovative brain imaging techniques, blood-based biomarkers, and memory assessments collected over a decade from a large number of participants, this project improves our understanding of the time course of neural changes in later life and their mechanistic role in the earliest stages of Alzheimer’s development.

Unique and Innovative

The proposed project puts a spotlight on previously understudied brain regions that form the starting point of Alzheimer’s-related tau accumulation and how their changes contribute to memory loss. Using MRI, plasma biomarkers, and behavior densely sampled over a decade in large samples of participants, it advances our understanding of the temporal trajectory of late-life neural changes in the brainstem and their mechanistic role in the earliest stages of Alzheimer’s development.

Foreseeable Benefits

The proposed project closes an important gap in the literature by (1) estimating person-specific change in several brainstem structures and (2) determining how this relates to the buildup of disease biomarkers and hippocampal memory loss in older participants at risk for sporadic Alzheimer’s. Moreover, this project puts an emphasis on improving the reliability of MRI of the brainstem, which will help qualify these measures as imaging biomarkers for early-stage Alzheimer’s pathologic changes.