Molecular subtypes of the Alzheimer's disease spectrum: Multimodal biomarker integration, mechanistic validation, and adaptive clinical translation.
Alzheimer's disease exhibits considerable heterogeneity in its clinical progression, neuropathological features, and underlying etiological mechanisms. However, current clinical diagnosis and treatment primarily rely on positron emission tomography and evidence-based cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers, with less emphasis on molecular subtypes, thereby limiting meaningful subtype stratification and personalized therapeutic interventions. Given advances in large-scale multi-omics technologies, single-cell genomics, and molecular imaging, research on the molecular subtypes of Alzheimer's disease is gradually increasing. In this review, we evaluate the growing body of studies on molecular subtypes of Alzheimer's disease through a comparative analysis of multimodal biomarkers, including cerebrospinal fluid proteomic profiles, single-nucleus transcriptomic architectures, neuroimaging endophenotypes, and adaptive clinical translation. We also analyze phenotypic variations across the Alzheimer's disease continuum to bridge molecular discoveries with clinical manifestations. Findings include proteomics-driven investigations that have identified five distinct cerebrospinal fluid proteomic subtypes. These subtypes are associated with divergent genetic backgrounds, survival rates, and cortical atrophy patterns, and are mechanistically linked to aberrant neuronal hyperproliferation, dysregulated innate immune activation, abnormalities in RNA splicing and processing, choroid plexus dysfunction, and blood-brain barrier impairment. Parallel progress in single-cell technologies, such as single-nucleus RNA sequencing, single-cell ATAC sequencing, and single-cell RNA sequencing applied to postmortem brain tissues, has enabled precise mapping of pathological cellular states across various brain regions. These approaches have revealed that molecular alterations in Alzheimer's disease exhibit high cell-type specificity and have uncovered novel disease-associated vascular-glial-neuronal co-expression modules, as well as vasculature-specific mechanisms correlated with APOE4 genetic risk. Tau- positron emission tomography neuroimaging studies have delineated four distinct spatiotemporal trajectories of tau accumulation, including temporo-lateral, occipital, hippocampal-sparing, and limbic subtypes, each associated with unique clinical phenotypes. From a genetic perspective, large-scale genome-wide association studies have identified approximately 75 risk loci implicated in Alzheimer's disease pathogenesis, including 42 previously unreported genomic regions, highlighting biological processes such as microglial activation, lipid metabolism, and synaptic function. Multi-omics analyses have further defined three hierarchical subtypes of Alzheimer's disease, which are primarily distinguished by dysregulation in either metabolic pathways, astroglial activation, or vascular and leptomeningeal function. Despite these advances in delineating heterogeneity, the field continues to face significant challenges. Key among these are the lack of cross-cohort reproducibility, standardized subtyping criteria, and evidence-based clinical validation.