Progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) has traditionally been characterized as a subcortical tauopathy with primary pathology affecting subcortical structures including the basal ganglia, brainstem, and diencephalon. However, accumulating evidence demonstrates that cortical involvement occurs in PSP, particularly in specific clinical variants and disease stages, with significant implications for clinical presentation, differential diagnosis, and therapeutic targeting[steele1964][dickson2010].
This mechanism page documents the evidence for cortical involvement in PSP, including neuropathological patterns, neuroimaging findings, clinical correlations, and the distinction between cortical-predominant PSP variants and classic Richardson syndrome.
The original description of PSP by Steele, Richardson, and Olszewski in 1964 emphasized subcortical pathology, particularly affecting the subthalamic nucleus, globus pallidus, and brainstem nuclei[^steele1964]. This characterization led to the traditional classification of PSP as a subcortical neuropsychiatric syndrome distinct from cortical dementias like Alzheimer's disease[^lang1995].
However, subsequent neuropathological studies have demonstrated that:
- Primary motor cortex (Brodmann area 4): Contains tau-positive neurons in 30-50% of PSP cases
- Prefrontal cortex (BA 9/10): Shows tau pathology in 40-60% of cases, correlating with executive dysfunction
- Superior frontal gyrus: Involved in 35-55% of cases
- Anterior cingulate cortex: Shows tau pathology in 25-40% of cases
- Temporal cortex: Less frequently involved but present in 15-30% of cases[rugiero2019][kovari2020]
The traditional subcortical classification understates the complexity of PSP pathology and has been revised to acknowledge a spectrum of cortical involvement across clinical variants.
PSP demonstrates characteristic 4R-tau deposits in cortical neurons and glia:
- Pretangles: Accumulation of hyperphosphorylated tau in neuronal cytoplasm
- Neurofibrillary tangles: Flame-shaped intraneuronal inclusions
- Dendritic tau: Tau-positive processes with bead-like appearance
- Neuronal loss: Correlates with tau burden in affected regions
- Tufted astrocytes: Best characterized in PSP; thorn-shaped astrocytes with tau-positive processes
- Coiled bodies: Oligodendroglial inclusions
- Astrocytic plaques: Ring-shaped tau deposits in astrocyte processes
Regional distribution follows a characteristic pattern:
- Frontal cortex: Most frequently affected (40-60%)
- Precentral gyrus: Motor cortex involvement in 30-50%
- Parietal cortex: Less affected (15-30%)
- Temporal cortex: Variable (15-30%)
- Occipital cortex: Spares early[rugiero2019][kovari2020]
Tau pathology shows layer-specific patterns:
- Layer III: Most frequently affected (50-70% of cortically involved cases)
- Layer V: Moderate involvement (40-60%)
- Layer II: Less common but significant (20-40%)
- Layer VI: Variable (15-35%)
Layer-specific involvement correlates with disconnection patterns and clinical manifestations[^schofield2011].
Neuropathological studies quantifying cortical tau burden demonstrate:
| Region |
PSP Cases with Cortical Tau |
Mean Tau Density |
| Prefrontal cortex |
55-65% |
15-25/HPF |
| Motor cortex |
40-50% |
10-20/HPF |
| Parietal cortex |
25-35% |
5-15/HPF |
| Temporal cortex |
20-30% |
5-10/HPF |
| Occipital cortex |
10-15% |
<5/HPF |
*HPF = high-power fields; control brains show <1/HPF in any region[dickson2010][rugiero2019]
A distinct clinical phenotype with early cortical features:
- Prevalence: 5-10% of all PSP cases
- Clinical features:
- Early cortical sensory deficits (astereognosis, neglect)
- Early aphasia or speech apraxia
- Prominent ideomotor apraxia
- Cortical sensory loss
- Neuroimaging: Cortical atrophy > subcortical atrophy
- Prognosis: Similar survival to classic PSP[^dickson2010]
Up to 30-40% of classic PSP-Richardson syndrome cases develop cortical features in later disease stages:
- Timing: Typically after 3-5 years of disease
- Features:
- Late-onset aphasia
- Ideomotor apraxia
- Cortical sensory deficits
- Myoclonus (25-30%)
The spectrum between PSP and corticobasal degeneration (CBD) demonstrates cortical involvement:
- Alien limb phenomenon: Cortical dysfunction signature
- Apraxia: Cortically-mediated motor planning deficit
- Cortical sensory loss: Astereognosis, neglect[^dickson2010]
VBM studies demonstrate cortical atrophy patterns in PSP:
Frontal regions:
- Superior frontal gyrus: 30-45% volume reduction
- Middle frontal gyrus: 25-35% reduction
- Precentral gyrus: 20-30% reduction
- Orbitofrontal cortex: 20-35% reduction
Other regions:
- Parietal precuneus: 15-25% reduction
- Temporal superior gyrus: 10-20% reduction
These patterns distinguish PSP from PD and MSA but partially overlap with CBD and AD[song2012][kojima2019].
Cortical thickness measurements reveal:
- Prefrontal cortex: 15-25% thinning
- Motor cortex: 10-20% thinning
- Parietal cortex: 5-15% thinning
- Superior temporal: 5-10% thinning
Lateralization patterns correlate with clinical asymmetry in PSP-P variants[^humphries2021].
DTI reveals white matter tract integrity loss in projection fibers connecting cortical and subcortical regions:
- Superior longitudinal fasciculus: Reduced FA, increased RD
- Corpus callosum: Interhemispheric disconnection
- Uncinate fasciculus: Frontolimbic disconnection
- ** cingulumBundle**: Executive network disruption[^agosta2013]
Cortical hypometabolism patterns in PSP:
- Prefrontal cortex: 20-35% hypometabolism
- Anterior cingulate: 25-40% hypometabolism
- Superior parietal: 15-25% hypometabolism
- Precuneus: 20-30% hypometabolism
Correlates with cognitive impairment but distinguishes from AD pattern[^humphries2021].
Using tau-specific ligands (AV-1451, PI-2620):
- Cortical tau binding in 35-50% of PSP cases
- Frontal cortex: highest binding
- Temporal cortex: moderate binding
- Parietal cortex: variable binding
- Occipital cortex: minimal binding
Distinguishes from AD cortical pattern (greater temporoparietal in AD)[^morari2019].
While traditionally considered subcortical, cortical contributions include:
- Working memory deficits: Prefrontal cortex (BA 46)
- Planning impairment: Prefrontal cortex (BA 44/45)
- Set-shifting: Dorsolateral prefrontal cortex
- Inhibition failure: Orbitofrontal cortex
- Progressive aphasia: Cortical involvement in 15-25% of PSP cases
- Speech apraxia: Cortical-basal circuits
- Reduced verbal fluency: Prefrontal cortex involvement
- Apathy: Anterior cingulate dysfunction
- Disinhibition: Orbitofrontal cortex
- Stereotypy: Cortico-striatal loops
- Utilization behavior: Parietal-frontal networks
- Apraxia: Parietal-frontal networks (25-40% of cases)
- Alien limb: Parietal cortex (in PSP-CBD overlap)
- Cortical myoclonus: Motor cortex hyperexcitability (20-30%)
- Astereognosis: Primary somatosensory cortex
- Neglect: Posterior parietal cortex
- Cortical sensory loss: Parietal cortex
| Feature |
PSP with Cortical Involvement |
Alzheimer's Disease |
| Cortical tau |
4R tau |
3R + 4R tau |
| Distribution |
Frontal dominant |
Temporoparietal dominant |
| Memory |
Retrieval failure |
Encoding failure |
| Spatial orientation |
Early deficit in PSP |
Early deficit in AD |
| Gaze palsy |
Present in PSP |
Absent in AD |
| Feature |
PSP |
CBD |
| Cortical atrophy |
Moderate |
Severe |
| Lateralization |
Variable |
Marked |
| Apraxia |
Variable |
Prominent |
| Alien limb |
Rare |
Common |
| MRI pattern |
Midbrain atrophy |
Asymmetric cortical[^boeve2013] |
The distinction between cortical and subcortical involvement has diagnostic implications for treatment (anticoagulation, blood pressure management) and prognosis.
The "prion-like" propagation of tau follows cortico-cortical networks:
- Origin: Subcortical nuclei (locus coeruleus, dorsal raphe)
- Spread: Via synaptic connections to cortex
- Cortical entry: Via neurotransmitter pathways
- Propagation: Between cortical neurons
- DNA methylation: Altered in prefrontal cortex
- Histone modifications: Cortical histone deacetylase activity
- Non-coding RNA: Cortical microRNA dysregulation
- Neuroinflammation: Microglial activation in cortex
- Oxidative stress: Cortical vulnerability
- Metabolic dysfunction: Cortical glucose hypometabolism
- Protein aggregation: Failed proteostasis in cortex
- Tau aggregation inhibitors: May benefit cortical tau
- Anti-tau antibodies: Currently in trials (Lecanemab, Gosuranemab)
- Small molecule inhibitors: Focus on cortical penetration
- Mitochondrial protectors: Support cortical energy
- Anti-inflammatory agents: Reduce cortical neuroinflammation
- Neurotrophic factors: Support cortical neurons
- Cognitive symptoms:Cholinesterase inhibitors (limited benefit)
- Behavioral symptoms: SSRIs, atypical antipsychotics (caution)
- Apraxia: Physical/occupational therapy
- CSF tau: Elevated p-tau181 in cortical involvement
- Serum NfL: Correlates with cortical atrophy
- MRI cortical thickness: Prognostic value
- Tau PET: Visualization of cortical tau load
- Apraxia testing: Early cortical involvement
- Language assessment: Cortical marker
- Cortical sensory examination: Neglect testing
- Mechanisms of cortical spread: How does tau traverse synaptic connections?
- Cortical vulnerability factors: What makes specific neurons susceptible?
- Therapeutic windows: Can cortical spread be prevented?
- Biomarker development: Can cortical involvement be predicted early?
- Anti-tau antibodies with cortical penetration
- Small molecule tau aggregation inhibitors
- Tau PET endpoints for cortical involvement
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