The circulating proteome and brain health: Mendelian randomisation and cross-sectional analyses

Author:

Walker Rosie1ORCID,Chong Michael2,Perrot Nicolas2ORCID,Pigeyre Marie2,Gadd Danni3ORCID,Stolicyn Aleks3ORCID,Shi Liu4,Whalley Heather3ORCID,Nevado-Holgado Alejo4ORCID,McIntosh Andrew5ORCID,Heitmeier Stefan6,Rangarajan Sumathy2,O'Donnell Martin7,Smith Eric8,Yusuf Salim2,Whiteley William5,Campbell Archie3ORCID,Shen Xueyi3ORCID,Pare Guillaume9ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Medical Genetics Section, Centre for Genomic and Experimental Medicine, Institute of Genetics and Molecular Medicine, Western General Hospital, University of Edinburgh

2. Population Health Research Institute

3. University of Edinburgh

4. University of Oxford

5. The University of Edinburgh

6. Bayer AG

7. National University of Ireland, Galway

8. University of Calgary

9. Population Health Research Institute, McMaster University

Abstract

Abstract Decline in cognitive function is the most feared aspect of ageing. Poorer midlife cognitive function is associated with increased dementia and stroke risk. The mechanisms underlying variation in cognitive function are uncertain. Here, we assessed associations between 1160 proteins’ plasma levels and two measures of cognitive function, the digit symbol substitution test (DSST) and the Montreal Cognitive Assessment in 1198 PURE-MIND participants. We identified five DSST performance-associated proteins (NCAN, BCAN, CA14, MOG, CDCP1), with NCAN and CDCP1 showing replicated association in an independent cohort, GS (N=1053). MRI-assessed structural brain phenotypes partially mediated (8-19%) associations between NCAN, BCAN, and MOG, and DSST performance. Mendelian randomisation analyses suggested higher CA14 levels might cause larger hippocampal volume and increased stroke risk, whilst higher CDCP1 levels might increase stroke and intracranial aneurysm risk. Our findings highlight candidates for further study and the potential for drug repurposing to reduce risk of stroke and cognitive decline.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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