Functional Connectome of Superagers Reveals Early Markers of Resilience and Vulnerability to Alzheimer’s Disease
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As populations age, identifying the neurobiological basis of cognitive resilience is critical for delaying or preventing Alzheimer’s disease (AD). While most older adults experience memory decline, a subset known as superagers (SA) maintains youthful memory into late life, offering a unique window into protective mechanisms against neurodegeneration. Here, we identified a functional connectivity (FC) signature, termed Alzheimer’s-resilient connectome (ARC), that robustly differentiates SA from age-matched patients with AD. Using resting-state fMRI in a discovery cohort (N = 290), we identified ARC derived from machine learning classifiers that distinguished SA from AD with high accuracy (AUC = 0.85), and validated the replicability of the ARC in an independent replication cohort (N = 143). ARC involved prefrontal, temporal and insular networks and was strongly associated with brain age. When applied to cognitively unimpaired (CU) adults (discovery cohort: N = 818 and replication cohort: N = 497), ARC-based subtyping revealed SA-like and AD-like subgroups with similar baseline cognitive performance but markedly divergent longitudinal trajectories. SA-like CU individuals showed slower cognitive decline, reduced amyloid-β accumulation, and lower risk of conversion to mild cognitive impairment and AD, reinforcing the ARC signature as a potential early indicator of resilience. Genome-wide association analysis identified CLYBL and FRMD6 as novel genetic modulators associated with these divergent aging phenotypes. Together, our findings position ARC as a sensitive and generalizable biomarker of resilience, enabling early risk stratification and precision prevention for AD.