Cargando…

Bile acid synthesis, modulation, and dementia: A metabolomic, transcriptomic, and pharmacoepidemiologic study

BACKGROUND: While Alzheimer disease (AD) and vascular dementia (VaD) may be accelerated by hypercholesterolemia, the mechanisms underlying this association are unclear. We tested whether dysregulation of cholesterol catabolism, through its conversion to primary bile acids (BAs), was associated with...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Varma, Vijay R., Wang, Youjin, An, Yang, Varma, Sudhir, Bilgel, Murat, Doshi, Jimit, Legido-Quigley, Cristina, Delgado, João C., Oommen, Anup M., Roberts, Jackson A., Wong, Dean F., Davatzikos, Christos, Resnick, Susan M., Troncoso, Juan C., Pletnikova, Olga, O’Brien, Richard, Hak, Eelko, Baak, Brenda N., Pfeiffer, Ruth, Baloni, Priyanka, Mohmoudiandehkordi, Siamak, Nho, Kwangsik, Kaddurah-Daouk, Rima, Bennett, David A., Gadalla, Shahinaz M., Thambisetty, Madhav
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8158920/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34043628
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1003615
_version_ 1783699969344012288
author Varma, Vijay R.
Wang, Youjin
An, Yang
Varma, Sudhir
Bilgel, Murat
Doshi, Jimit
Legido-Quigley, Cristina
Delgado, João C.
Oommen, Anup M.
Roberts, Jackson A.
Wong, Dean F.
Davatzikos, Christos
Resnick, Susan M.
Troncoso, Juan C.
Pletnikova, Olga
O’Brien, Richard
Hak, Eelko
Baak, Brenda N.
Pfeiffer, Ruth
Baloni, Priyanka
Mohmoudiandehkordi, Siamak
Nho, Kwangsik
Kaddurah-Daouk, Rima
Bennett, David A.
Gadalla, Shahinaz M.
Thambisetty, Madhav
author_facet Varma, Vijay R.
Wang, Youjin
An, Yang
Varma, Sudhir
Bilgel, Murat
Doshi, Jimit
Legido-Quigley, Cristina
Delgado, João C.
Oommen, Anup M.
Roberts, Jackson A.
Wong, Dean F.
Davatzikos, Christos
Resnick, Susan M.
Troncoso, Juan C.
Pletnikova, Olga
O’Brien, Richard
Hak, Eelko
Baak, Brenda N.
Pfeiffer, Ruth
Baloni, Priyanka
Mohmoudiandehkordi, Siamak
Nho, Kwangsik
Kaddurah-Daouk, Rima
Bennett, David A.
Gadalla, Shahinaz M.
Thambisetty, Madhav
author_sort Varma, Vijay R.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: While Alzheimer disease (AD) and vascular dementia (VaD) may be accelerated by hypercholesterolemia, the mechanisms underlying this association are unclear. We tested whether dysregulation of cholesterol catabolism, through its conversion to primary bile acids (BAs), was associated with dementia pathogenesis. METHODS AND FINDINGS: We used a 3-step study design to examine the role of the primary BAs, cholic acid (CA), and chenodeoxycholic acid (CDCA) as well as their principal biosynthetic precursor, 7α-hydroxycholesterol (7α-OHC), in dementia. In Step 1, we tested whether serum markers of cholesterol catabolism were associated with brain amyloid accumulation, white matter lesions (WMLs), and brain atrophy. In Step 2, we tested whether exposure to bile acid sequestrants (BAS) was associated with risk of dementia. In Step 3, we examined plausible mechanisms underlying these findings by testing whether brain levels of primary BAs and gene expression of their principal receptors are altered in AD. Step 1: We assayed serum concentrations CA, CDCA, and 7α-OHC and used linear regression and mixed effects models to test their associations with brain amyloid accumulation (N = 141), WMLs, and brain atrophy (N = 134) in the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging (BLSA). The BLSA is an ongoing, community-based cohort study that began in 1958. Participants in the BLSA neuroimaging sample were approximately 46% male with a mean age of 76 years; longitudinal analyses included an average of 2.5 follow-up magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) visits. We used the Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) (N = 1,666) to validate longitudinal neuroimaging results in BLSA. ADNI is an ongoing, community-based cohort study that began in 2003. Participants were approximately 55% male with a mean age of 74 years; longitudinal analyses included an average of 5.2 follow-up MRI visits. Lower serum concentrations of 7α-OHC, CA, and CDCA were associated with higher brain amyloid deposition (p = 0.041), faster WML accumulation (p = 0.050), and faster brain atrophy mainly (false discovery rate [FDR] p = <0.001–0.013) in males in BLSA. In ADNI, we found a modest sex-specific effect indicating that lower serum concentrations of CA and CDCA were associated with faster brain atrophy (FDR p = 0.049) in males. Step 2: In the Clinical Practice Research Datalink (CPRD) dataset, covering >4 million registrants from general practice clinics in the United Kingdom, we tested whether patients using BAS (BAS users; 3,208 with ≥2 prescriptions), which reduce circulating BAs and increase cholesterol catabolism, had altered dementia risk compared to those on non-statin lipid-modifying therapies (LMT users; 23,483 with ≥2 prescriptions). Patients in the study (BAS/LMT) were approximately 34%/38% male and with a mean age of 65/68 years; follow-up time was 4.7/5.7 years. We found that BAS use was not significantly associated with risk of all-cause dementia (hazard ratio (HR) = 1.03, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.72–1.46, p = 0.88) or its subtypes. We found a significant difference between the risk of VaD in males compared to females (p = 0.040) and a significant dose–response relationship between BAS use and risk of VaD (p-trend = 0.045) in males. Step 3: We assayed brain tissue concentrations of CA and CDCA comparing AD and control (CON) samples in the BLSA autopsy cohort (N = 29). Participants in the BLSA autopsy cohort (AD/CON) were approximately 50%/77% male with a mean age of 87/82 years. We analyzed single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-Seq) data to compare brain BA receptor gene expression between AD and CON samples from the Religious Orders Study and Memory and Aging Project (ROSMAP) cohort (N = 46). ROSMAP is an ongoing, community-based cohort study that began in 1994. Participants (AD/CON) were approximately 56%/36% male with a mean age of 85/85 years. In BLSA, we found that CA and CDCA were detectable in postmortem brain tissue samples and were marginally higher in AD samples compared to CON. In ROSMAP, we found sex-specific differences in altered neuronal gene expression of BA receptors in AD. Study limitations include the small sample sizes in the BLSA cohort and likely inaccuracies in the clinical diagnosis of dementia subtypes in primary care settings. CONCLUSIONS: We combined targeted metabolomics in serum and amyloid positron emission tomography (PET) and MRI of the brain with pharmacoepidemiologic analysis to implicate dysregulation of cholesterol catabolism in dementia pathogenesis. We observed that lower serum BA concentration mainly in males is associated with neuroimaging markers of dementia, and pharmacological lowering of BA levels may be associated with higher risk of VaD in males. We hypothesize that dysregulation of BA signaling pathways in the brain may represent a plausible biologic mechanism underlying these results. Together, our observations suggest a novel mechanism relating abnormalities in cholesterol catabolism to risk of dementia.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8158920
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-81589202021-06-09 Bile acid synthesis, modulation, and dementia: A metabolomic, transcriptomic, and pharmacoepidemiologic study Varma, Vijay R. Wang, Youjin An, Yang Varma, Sudhir Bilgel, Murat Doshi, Jimit Legido-Quigley, Cristina Delgado, João C. Oommen, Anup M. Roberts, Jackson A. Wong, Dean F. Davatzikos, Christos Resnick, Susan M. Troncoso, Juan C. Pletnikova, Olga O’Brien, Richard Hak, Eelko Baak, Brenda N. Pfeiffer, Ruth Baloni, Priyanka Mohmoudiandehkordi, Siamak Nho, Kwangsik Kaddurah-Daouk, Rima Bennett, David A. Gadalla, Shahinaz M. Thambisetty, Madhav PLoS Med Research Article BACKGROUND: While Alzheimer disease (AD) and vascular dementia (VaD) may be accelerated by hypercholesterolemia, the mechanisms underlying this association are unclear. We tested whether dysregulation of cholesterol catabolism, through its conversion to primary bile acids (BAs), was associated with dementia pathogenesis. METHODS AND FINDINGS: We used a 3-step study design to examine the role of the primary BAs, cholic acid (CA), and chenodeoxycholic acid (CDCA) as well as their principal biosynthetic precursor, 7α-hydroxycholesterol (7α-OHC), in dementia. In Step 1, we tested whether serum markers of cholesterol catabolism were associated with brain amyloid accumulation, white matter lesions (WMLs), and brain atrophy. In Step 2, we tested whether exposure to bile acid sequestrants (BAS) was associated with risk of dementia. In Step 3, we examined plausible mechanisms underlying these findings by testing whether brain levels of primary BAs and gene expression of their principal receptors are altered in AD. Step 1: We assayed serum concentrations CA, CDCA, and 7α-OHC and used linear regression and mixed effects models to test their associations with brain amyloid accumulation (N = 141), WMLs, and brain atrophy (N = 134) in the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging (BLSA). The BLSA is an ongoing, community-based cohort study that began in 1958. Participants in the BLSA neuroimaging sample were approximately 46% male with a mean age of 76 years; longitudinal analyses included an average of 2.5 follow-up magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) visits. We used the Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) (N = 1,666) to validate longitudinal neuroimaging results in BLSA. ADNI is an ongoing, community-based cohort study that began in 2003. Participants were approximately 55% male with a mean age of 74 years; longitudinal analyses included an average of 5.2 follow-up MRI visits. Lower serum concentrations of 7α-OHC, CA, and CDCA were associated with higher brain amyloid deposition (p = 0.041), faster WML accumulation (p = 0.050), and faster brain atrophy mainly (false discovery rate [FDR] p = <0.001–0.013) in males in BLSA. In ADNI, we found a modest sex-specific effect indicating that lower serum concentrations of CA and CDCA were associated with faster brain atrophy (FDR p = 0.049) in males. Step 2: In the Clinical Practice Research Datalink (CPRD) dataset, covering >4 million registrants from general practice clinics in the United Kingdom, we tested whether patients using BAS (BAS users; 3,208 with ≥2 prescriptions), which reduce circulating BAs and increase cholesterol catabolism, had altered dementia risk compared to those on non-statin lipid-modifying therapies (LMT users; 23,483 with ≥2 prescriptions). Patients in the study (BAS/LMT) were approximately 34%/38% male and with a mean age of 65/68 years; follow-up time was 4.7/5.7 years. We found that BAS use was not significantly associated with risk of all-cause dementia (hazard ratio (HR) = 1.03, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.72–1.46, p = 0.88) or its subtypes. We found a significant difference between the risk of VaD in males compared to females (p = 0.040) and a significant dose–response relationship between BAS use and risk of VaD (p-trend = 0.045) in males. Step 3: We assayed brain tissue concentrations of CA and CDCA comparing AD and control (CON) samples in the BLSA autopsy cohort (N = 29). Participants in the BLSA autopsy cohort (AD/CON) were approximately 50%/77% male with a mean age of 87/82 years. We analyzed single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-Seq) data to compare brain BA receptor gene expression between AD and CON samples from the Religious Orders Study and Memory and Aging Project (ROSMAP) cohort (N = 46). ROSMAP is an ongoing, community-based cohort study that began in 1994. Participants (AD/CON) were approximately 56%/36% male with a mean age of 85/85 years. In BLSA, we found that CA and CDCA were detectable in postmortem brain tissue samples and were marginally higher in AD samples compared to CON. In ROSMAP, we found sex-specific differences in altered neuronal gene expression of BA receptors in AD. Study limitations include the small sample sizes in the BLSA cohort and likely inaccuracies in the clinical diagnosis of dementia subtypes in primary care settings. CONCLUSIONS: We combined targeted metabolomics in serum and amyloid positron emission tomography (PET) and MRI of the brain with pharmacoepidemiologic analysis to implicate dysregulation of cholesterol catabolism in dementia pathogenesis. We observed that lower serum BA concentration mainly in males is associated with neuroimaging markers of dementia, and pharmacological lowering of BA levels may be associated with higher risk of VaD in males. We hypothesize that dysregulation of BA signaling pathways in the brain may represent a plausible biologic mechanism underlying these results. Together, our observations suggest a novel mechanism relating abnormalities in cholesterol catabolism to risk of dementia. Public Library of Science 2021-05-27 /pmc/articles/PMC8158920/ /pubmed/34043628 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1003615 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication.
spellingShingle Research Article
Varma, Vijay R.
Wang, Youjin
An, Yang
Varma, Sudhir
Bilgel, Murat
Doshi, Jimit
Legido-Quigley, Cristina
Delgado, João C.
Oommen, Anup M.
Roberts, Jackson A.
Wong, Dean F.
Davatzikos, Christos
Resnick, Susan M.
Troncoso, Juan C.
Pletnikova, Olga
O’Brien, Richard
Hak, Eelko
Baak, Brenda N.
Pfeiffer, Ruth
Baloni, Priyanka
Mohmoudiandehkordi, Siamak
Nho, Kwangsik
Kaddurah-Daouk, Rima
Bennett, David A.
Gadalla, Shahinaz M.
Thambisetty, Madhav
Bile acid synthesis, modulation, and dementia: A metabolomic, transcriptomic, and pharmacoepidemiologic study
title Bile acid synthesis, modulation, and dementia: A metabolomic, transcriptomic, and pharmacoepidemiologic study
title_full Bile acid synthesis, modulation, and dementia: A metabolomic, transcriptomic, and pharmacoepidemiologic study
title_fullStr Bile acid synthesis, modulation, and dementia: A metabolomic, transcriptomic, and pharmacoepidemiologic study
title_full_unstemmed Bile acid synthesis, modulation, and dementia: A metabolomic, transcriptomic, and pharmacoepidemiologic study
title_short Bile acid synthesis, modulation, and dementia: A metabolomic, transcriptomic, and pharmacoepidemiologic study
title_sort bile acid synthesis, modulation, and dementia: a metabolomic, transcriptomic, and pharmacoepidemiologic study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8158920/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34043628
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1003615
work_keys_str_mv AT varmavijayr bileacidsynthesismodulationanddementiaametabolomictranscriptomicandpharmacoepidemiologicstudy
AT wangyoujin bileacidsynthesismodulationanddementiaametabolomictranscriptomicandpharmacoepidemiologicstudy
AT anyang bileacidsynthesismodulationanddementiaametabolomictranscriptomicandpharmacoepidemiologicstudy
AT varmasudhir bileacidsynthesismodulationanddementiaametabolomictranscriptomicandpharmacoepidemiologicstudy
AT bilgelmurat bileacidsynthesismodulationanddementiaametabolomictranscriptomicandpharmacoepidemiologicstudy
AT doshijimit bileacidsynthesismodulationanddementiaametabolomictranscriptomicandpharmacoepidemiologicstudy
AT legidoquigleycristina bileacidsynthesismodulationanddementiaametabolomictranscriptomicandpharmacoepidemiologicstudy
AT delgadojoaoc bileacidsynthesismodulationanddementiaametabolomictranscriptomicandpharmacoepidemiologicstudy
AT oommenanupm bileacidsynthesismodulationanddementiaametabolomictranscriptomicandpharmacoepidemiologicstudy
AT robertsjacksona bileacidsynthesismodulationanddementiaametabolomictranscriptomicandpharmacoepidemiologicstudy
AT wongdeanf bileacidsynthesismodulationanddementiaametabolomictranscriptomicandpharmacoepidemiologicstudy
AT davatzikoschristos bileacidsynthesismodulationanddementiaametabolomictranscriptomicandpharmacoepidemiologicstudy
AT resnicksusanm bileacidsynthesismodulationanddementiaametabolomictranscriptomicandpharmacoepidemiologicstudy
AT troncosojuanc bileacidsynthesismodulationanddementiaametabolomictranscriptomicandpharmacoepidemiologicstudy
AT pletnikovaolga bileacidsynthesismodulationanddementiaametabolomictranscriptomicandpharmacoepidemiologicstudy
AT obrienrichard bileacidsynthesismodulationanddementiaametabolomictranscriptomicandpharmacoepidemiologicstudy
AT hakeelko bileacidsynthesismodulationanddementiaametabolomictranscriptomicandpharmacoepidemiologicstudy
AT baakbrendan bileacidsynthesismodulationanddementiaametabolomictranscriptomicandpharmacoepidemiologicstudy
AT pfeifferruth bileacidsynthesismodulationanddementiaametabolomictranscriptomicandpharmacoepidemiologicstudy
AT balonipriyanka bileacidsynthesismodulationanddementiaametabolomictranscriptomicandpharmacoepidemiologicstudy
AT mohmoudiandehkordisiamak bileacidsynthesismodulationanddementiaametabolomictranscriptomicandpharmacoepidemiologicstudy
AT nhokwangsik bileacidsynthesismodulationanddementiaametabolomictranscriptomicandpharmacoepidemiologicstudy
AT kaddurahdaoukrima bileacidsynthesismodulationanddementiaametabolomictranscriptomicandpharmacoepidemiologicstudy
AT bennettdavida bileacidsynthesismodulationanddementiaametabolomictranscriptomicandpharmacoepidemiologicstudy
AT gadallashahinazm bileacidsynthesismodulationanddementiaametabolomictranscriptomicandpharmacoepidemiologicstudy
AT thambisettymadhav bileacidsynthesismodulationanddementiaametabolomictranscriptomicandpharmacoepidemiologicstudy