Associations of Estradiol and APOE4 Genotype with Hippocampal Connectivity during Verbal Encoding in Postmenopausal Women
Rachel A Schroeder, Rebecca C. Thurston, Minjie Wu, Howard J Aizenstein, Thomas K Karikari, M. Ilyas Kamboh, Ann D Cohen, Pauline M Maki

TL;DR
High estradiol levels may worsen brain connectivity and increase Alzheimer's risk in postmenopausal women with the APOE4 gene, but not in those without it.
Contribution
Shows estradiol's effects on brain connectivity and AD biomarkers differ based on APOE4 genotype in postmenopausal women.
Findings
Higher estradiol in APOE4+ women is linked to reduced hippocampal connectivity and increased AD biomarkers.
In APOE4- women, higher estradiol is associated with beneficial or neutral hippocampal connectivity.
Estradiol-related connectivity patterns are more strongly tied to AD pathology in APOE4+ individuals.
Abstract
High levels of endogenous estradiol in postmenopausal women are associated with beneficial effects on memory circuitry after menopause. Here we extend this work to examine 1) how estradiol and hippocampal functional connectivity (HippfConn) vary as a function of APOE4 carrier status, and 2) whether estradiol‐associated patterns of HippfConn relate to adverse AD biomarker profiles among APOE4+ women. Participants were enrolled in MsBrain, a cohort study of postmenopausal women, a subsample of whom completed 3T MRI neuroimaging, estradiol assessment, and plasma AD biomarker (pTau181, pTau231, amyloid‐beta 42/40) measures (n = 172, mean age 59.3 ± 3.9 years, 83.1% white, 23.33% APOE4 carriers). Interactive associations of estradiol levels and APOE4 genotype (APOE4+ versus APOE4‐, excluding APOE2) with whole‐brain left and right HippfConn during a word encoding fMRI task were analyzed via…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMenopause: Health Impacts and Treatments · Functional Brain Connectivity Studies · Dementia and Cognitive Impairment Research
