Interactive Genomic Exploration · Frontal and Temporal Lobes

The Genetics of Frontotemporal Dementia

An interactive journey through the human genome to understand why behaviour and language change — and what role genes such as C9orf72, MAPT (tau) and GRN (progranulin) play.

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Familial cases (the rest are sporadic)
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Cause of early-onset dementia (<65)
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Genes curated in this atlas
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Pathological proteins: tau and TDP-43
The story at a glance

From a gene to the lobes that atrophy

The whole journey of this page, summarised in steps.

Starting point
Genes (C9orf72 · MAPT · GRN)
The abnormal protein
Misfolded tau or TDP-43
They accumulate
Intraneuronal aggregates
The target cell
Neuronal damage
The region
Frontal and temporal lobes
Outcome
Behavioural and language changes
The disease

What is FTD?

Before getting into the genetics, it helps to understand the disease that these genes help to explain.

Frontotemporal dementia (FTD) is the second most common cause of early-onset dementia (before age 65). The frontal and temporal lobes of the brain degenerate selectively — the regions that govern personality, behaviour and language. Unlike Alzheimer's disease, episodic memory is relatively preserved early on. The pathology shows aggregates of the tau protein or the TDP-43 protein.

45–65 years
Typical age of onset (early-onset dementia)
~30–40 %
Familial forms (the rest are sporadic)
Tau or TDP-43
The two major proteins that aggregate
Frontal and temporal
Lobes that degenerate selectively
Origin

From Arnold Pick to genetics

In 1892, the neurologist and psychiatrist Arnold Pick described, in Prague, cases of focal atrophy of the frontal and temporal lobes with aphasia and behavioural changes: the entity that for decades was known as "Pick's disease". For more than a century it was a clinical and anatomical entity; the genetic era began in 1998 with mutations in MAPT (tau).

Symptoms

When behaviour and language change

Symptoms depend on which region is affected first, and they define the major clinical variants:

Behavioural variant (bvFTD)

Personality changes

The most common form: personality changes, disinhibition, apathy and loss of empathy. Atrophy of the frontal lobe predominates.

Primary progressive aphasia

Language is lost

Language deteriorates progressively: the semantic variant (losing the meaning of words) or the non-fluent/agrammatic variant (struggling to produce speech).

Unlike Alzheimer's

Memory is preserved

Early on, episodic memory remains relatively intact. What fails first is behaviour or language, not the recollection of recent events.

The FTD-ALS spectrum

Sometimes with ALS

A subset of patients also develops amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (FTD-ALS): they share the C9orf72 gene and TDP-43 pathology.

Profiles

Not all FTD is the same

By symptom

Behaviour vs. language

The behavioural variant affects personality first; the language variants (semantic or non-fluent primary progressive aphasia) affect speech first.

By overlap

Forms with ALS (FTD-ALS)

Some forms are associated with motor neuron disease: they are the two ends of a single continuum, linked by C9orf72 and TDP-43.

By gene

C9orf72 · MAPT · GRN

Each gene has its signature: C9orf72 (often with ALS), MAPT (tau pathology) and GRN (TDP-43 pathology).

Over time

A progressive disease

FTD usually begins subtly (a change in character or language) and spreads to more functions as it progresses.

Subtle onset

Changes in character, impulsive decisions or language difficulties that are often attributed to another cause.

Defined syndrome

The variant becomes recognisable: behavioural (disinhibition, apathy) or language (primary progressive aphasia).

Spread

More cognitive functions become affected; dependence increases. In some cases motor or ALS signs appear.

Advanced phase

Widespread loss of autonomy and, frequently, mutism. Supportive care is the mainstay of management.

Treatment

Today, only symptomatic

There is no drug that halts or modifies the disease. The approach aims to control symptoms and support the person and their family.

Symptoms

Behaviour management

Non-pharmacological strategies and, when needed, medication for disinhibition, apathy or agitation. There is no treatment that halts the disease.

Support

Speech therapy and carers

Speech and language therapy for the language variants, communication aids and strong support for carers, who bear much of the burden.

What does NOT help

No disease-modifying drug

Alzheimer's drugs (cholinesterase inhibitors) are not indicated and can worsen behaviour. The hope lies in gene therapies under trial.

Science-based educational content (Pick, 1892; MAPT/tau, Hutton et al. 1998; GRN/progranulin, Baker et al. 2006; C9orf72, DeJesus-Hernandez/Renton 2011). It does not replace assessment by a healthcare professional.

Foundations

What is DNA?

DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) is the molecule that stores the genetic instructions of every living thing, spread across some 3 billion base pairs.

Four bases — A, T, C and G — form the double helix. In FTD, the variants affect proteins such as tau (which stabilises the cytoskeleton), progranulin, or proteins that handle RNA: when they fail, toxic aggregates form in the neurons of the frontal and temporal lobes.

A — Adenine
T — Thymine
C — Cytosine
G — Guanine
Interactive

Explore the genome

FTD genes are spread across several chromosomes. The most prominent are 9 (C9orf72) and 17 (MAPT and GRN). Click a chromosome to see its regions, the evidence and the genes involved.

Gene atlas

Gene catalogue

Causal and risk genes for FTD. Each one leaves a tau or TDP-43 fingerprint. Search and filter by mechanism; click a card to see its function and the studies.

Functional convergence

Cellular mechanisms

FTD genes converge on a few processes within the neuron. Hover over a node to identify the gene; click to see the detail.

Interactive

From the protein to the lobes

Two keys to FTD: the two major pathologies (tau ↔ TDP-43) and frontotemporal atrophy. Explore them.

The two major pathologies

Tau ↔ TDP-43

Almost all FTD is explained by the build-up of one of two proteins: tau or TDP-43. Each is associated with different genes and clinical variants. Click to compare.

Protein
Typical genes
Common features

The FTD-ALS spectrum

One gene, two extremes

The GGGGCC expansion in C9orf72 can cause frontotemporal dementia, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis or both: two ends of a single continuum. It is a repeat, but it is worth remembering that FTD has several genes and mechanisms, not only the repeat.

8GGGGCC repeats
Normal

The target region

Frontotemporal atrophy

FTD selectively degenerates the frontal lobe and the temporal lobe. Click each region of the diagram.

More than a century of science

Timeline of discoveries

From Pick's disease to the C9orf72 gene and the biomarkers and antisense therapies in development.

Biology

Biological processes involved

How FTD genes damage the neurons of the frontal and temporal lobes.

What the data show

Is FTD inherited?

FTD has a strong genetic component: around 30–40 % of cases are familial, and inheritance is almost always autosomal dominant (a single altered copy is enough).

0%
Familial cases (autosomal dominant inheritance)
0%
Risk for each child of a carrier (dominant)

C9orf72, MAPT and GRN account for most familial forms and are inherited in a dominant manner: each child of a carrier has a 50 % chance of inheriting the variant. C9orf72 is, in addition, the link with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (FTD-ALS spectrum).

FTD cases with an identifiable gene~30–40 %

About a third of patients have a known monogenic cause; in the rest, polygenic genetics, ageing and as-yet-undiscovered factors play a role.

Takeaways

What do we know for certain?

The essentials about the genetics of frontotemporal dementia:

The most important point: identifying the gene guides prognosis and opens the door to targeted therapies. Researchers are investigating ASOs against C9orf72 and strategies that raise progranulin in GRN carriers. For now there is no drug that halts the disease.

Therapeutic avenues: where does each one stand?
Already in clinical use

Only symptomatic and supportive

  • No disease-modifying drug: no treatment halts FTD
  • Behaviour management and speech therapy for language
  • Support for carers and supportive care
In clinical trials

Gene-targeted

  • Anti-C9orf72 ASOs to reduce the toxic RNA from the expansion
  • Therapies that raise progranulin in GRN carriers
  • Anti-tau (immunotherapy and ASOs) for forms with tau pathology
Preclinical research

Targeting the cause

  • Gene editing and gene therapy to correct or silence mutations
  • Targets on TDP-43 and the cryptic exons that appear when it fails
  • Biomarkers (neurofilaments, blood progranulin) to measure the effect
Myths

What FTD is NOT

FTD is a neurodegenerative disease. It is worth dispelling some mistaken ideas:

It is not the same as Alzheimer's It does not start with memory (preserved early on) It is not contagious It is not "just" a psychiatric problem It is not caused solely by a DNA repeat

FTD is often mistaken for depression or a psychiatric disorder because of its behavioural changes; and although C9orf72 is a repeat expansion, FTD has several genes and mechanisms (tau, progranulin, proteostasis), not only the repeat.

The frontier

The latest and what's coming

Genetics is starting to turn FTD into a disease with concrete therapeutic targets.

Recent advances

What is changing the field

Progranulin

Raising progranulin (GRN)

In GRN-related FTD, the disease is due to a shortage of progranulin. Several strategies (gene therapy, drugs) aim to restore its levels; it is one of the clearest targets.

The link with ALS

ASOs against C9orf72

Because C9orf72 causes both FTD and ALS, the ASOs that reduce the toxic RNA from the GGGGCC expansion are being investigated for both; several are in clinical trials.

Measuring better

Biomarkers

Blood neurofilaments and progranulin, together with brain imaging, allow damage and treatment response to be estimated, accelerating trials.

Future directions

Where the research is heading

Precision

Genetic medicine

Sequencing each person to choose the strategy according to their gene: FTD is moving towards a personalised treatment by mutation (tau, progranulin or C9orf72).

Tau and TDP-43

Targeting the aggregate

Immunotherapies and anti-tau ASOs, and strategies targeting TDP-43 and its cryptic exons, could halt the two major pathologies of FTD.

Treating earlier

Early diagnosis

Detecting the disease — even before symptoms in known carriers — to intervene while there are still neurons to protect.

Research is moving fast and some of these results are preliminary: the specific dates and figures may change as trials mature.

Frequently asked questions

Common questions

The questions that come up most when learning about FTD.

Is FTD the same as Alzheimer's?
No. They are different dementias. Alzheimer's begins with memory and appears mainly in older people; FTD begins with behaviour or language, usually starts before age 65 and, at first, memory is relatively preserved. The pathology is also different (tau or TDP-43, not amyloid).
Is FTD hereditary?
To a large extent, yes: around 30–40 % of cases are familial, almost always with autosomal dominant inheritance. The main genes are C9orf72, MAPT (tau) and GRN (progranulin). Each child of a carrier has a 50 % risk of inheriting the variant. Always with genetic counselling.
Why does the personality change so much?
Because FTD selectively degenerates the frontal lobe, the region that regulates behaviour, judgement and empathy. Hence the disinhibition, apathy and loss of empathy of the behavioural variant. It is not "bad will": it is brain damage.
How is it related to ALS?
FTD and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) form a spectrum: they share the C9orf72 gene and TDP-43 pathology. Some patients with FTD develop ALS (and vice versa). They are two ends of a single disease continuum.
Is there a treatment?
For now there is no drug that halts the disease. Treatment is symptomatic (behaviour management, speech therapy) and supportive for the person and their carers. The hope lies in the gene therapies under trial (anti-C9orf72 ASOs, raising progranulin, anti-tau).
Does FTD affect memory?
At the onset, episodic memory is relatively preserved — one of the key features distinguishing it from Alzheimer's. What fails first is behaviour or language. In advanced stages, broader memory problems can indeed appear.
Sources and glossary

Where this comes from

Milestones and scientific sources on which this page is based.

Foundational milestones
1892Pick A. Description of focal frontotemporal atrophy with aphasia and behavioural changes ("Pick's disease"), Prague.
1998Hutton M et al. Association of missense and 5′-splice-site mutations in tau with the inherited dementia FTDP-17. Nature. The MAPT gene (tau).
2006Baker M et al. Mutations in progranulin cause tau-negative frontotemporal dementia linked to chromosome 17. Nature. The GRN gene.
The gene of the FTD-ALS spectrum
2011DeJesus-Hernandez M et al.; Renton AE et al. Expanded GGGGCC hexanucleotide repeat in C9ORF72 causes ALS and FTD. Neuron. The link between FTD and ALS.
Databases
DBsOMIM #600274 (frontotemporal dementia) and the Alzforum mutation database.

An educational synthesis page; not a primary clinical source. For medical decisions, consult professionals and the official resources of frontotemporal dementia associations.

Glossary

Key terms

TauProtein that stabilises the neuronal cytoskeleton.
Encoded by the MAPT gene. It normally stabilises the microtubules of the axon. In a subset of FTD (and in Alzheimer's) it aggregates inside the neuron, defining "tau-positive" pathology.
TDP-43RNA-binding protein whose aggregates mark the other major pathology.
Encoded by TARDBP. It normally resides in the nucleus and regulates RNA. In many FTD cases and almost all ALS it relocates to the cytoplasm and aggregates: this is "TDP-43-positive" pathology, the link of the FTD-ALS spectrum.
ProgranulinTrophic factor whose deficiency causes FTD.
Encoded by the GRN gene. Mutations that reduce its levels (haploinsufficiency) cause FTD with TDP-43 pathology. Raising progranulin is a prominent therapeutic target.
C9orf72The gene of the FTD-ALS spectrum.
It contains a GGGGCC hexanucleotide repeat. When it expands to hundreds or thousands of copies, it produces toxic RNA and dipeptides: the most common familial cause of FTD and a direct link with ALS.
Behavioural variant (bvFTD)The most common form of FTD.
Atrophy of the frontal lobe predominates. It manifests as personality changes, disinhibition, apathy and loss of empathy, with memory relatively preserved early on.
Primary progressive aphasiaThe language variants of FTD.
Progressive deterioration of language: the semantic form (losing the meaning of words) or the non-fluent/agrammatic form (difficulty producing speech). Atrophy of the temporal lobe predominates.
Frontal / temporal lobeThe regions that degenerate in FTD.
The frontal lobe governs behaviour, judgement and empathy; the temporal lobe, language and meaning. Their selective atrophy explains the characteristic symptoms of FTD.
FTD-ALS spectrumThe overlap with motor neuron disease.
FTD and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis share genes (above all C9orf72) and TDP-43 pathology. They are understood as two ends of a single continuum: one with dementia, the other with motor neuron involvement.
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