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PSP vs CBS Phenotypic Divergence: Mechanistic Comparison

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mechanism2338 wordssynced 2026-04-02

PSP vs CBS Phenotypic Divergence: Mechanistic Comparison

Overview

Progressive Supranuclear Palsy ([PSP](/diseases/progressive-supranuclear-palsy)) and Corticobasal Syndrome ([CBS](/diseases/corticobasal-syndrome)) are both classified as 4R-tauopathies, diseases characterized by the predominant accumulation of tau isoforms containing four microtubule-binding repeats. Despite this shared molecular pathology — and considerable overlap in their genetic architecture — the two conditions produce strikingly different clinical syndromes. Understanding the mechanistic basis for this phenotypic divergence is central to developing targeted therapies for each condition.

PSP-RS presents with early postural instability, vertical supranuclear gaze palsy, and axial akinesia, reflecting vulnerability of brainstem and basal ganglia structures. CBS, by contrast, is defined by asymmetric cortical signs — apraxia, alien limb phenomenon, cortical sensory loss — reflecting damage to motor and parietal cortical regions. The divergence emerges from differences in: (1) genetic risk profiles, (2) regional patterns of neuronal vulnerability, (3) tau filament conformations, (4) neuroimmune contributions, and (5) spreading mechanisms.

1. Clinical Divergence

1.1 PSP Richardson Syndrome (PSP-RS)

PSP-RS is the most common PSP phenotype, accounting for 50-55% of pathologically confirmed cases[@williams2005]. The cardinal features are:

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