Multi-Omic analyses characterize the ceramide/sphingomyelin pathway as a therapeutic target in Alzheimer’s disease

Author:

Baloni Priyanka,Arnold MatthiasORCID,Buitrago Luna,Nho Kwangsik,Moreno Herman,Huynh Kevin,Brauner Barbara,Louie Gregory,Kueider-Paisley Alexandra,Suhre KarstenORCID,Saykin Andrew J.ORCID,Ekroos Kim,Meikle Peter J.ORCID,Hood Leroy,Price Nathan D.,Arnold Matthias,Blach Colette,Kaddurah-Daouk Rima,Doraiswamy Murali,Mahmoudiandehkordi Siamak,Welsh-Bohmer Kathleen,Plassman Brenda,Krumsiek Jan,Batra Richa,Saykin Andrew,Yan Jingwen,Risacher Shannon L.,Meikle Peter,Wang Tingting,Ikram Arfan,Ahmad Shahzad,Hankemeier Thomas,Hernandez Ivan A.,Heinken Almut,Martinelli Filippo,Thiele Ines,Hertel Johannes,Hensen Tim,Hulshof Tim,Farrer Lindsay A.,Au Rhoda,Qiu Wendy Wei Qiao,Stein Thor,Karu Naama,Borkowski Kamil,Newman John,Jia Wei,Xie Guoxiang,Wang Jingye,Wei Runmin,Rader Dan,Kling Mitchel,Shaw Leslie,Doraiswamy P. Murali,Funk Cory C.ORCID,Hernández A. Iván,Kastenmüller GabiORCID,Baillie RebeccaORCID,Han XianlinORCID,Kaddurah-Daouk RimaORCID,

Abstract

AbstractDysregulation of sphingomyelin and ceramide metabolism have been implicated in Alzheimer’s disease. Genome-wide and transcriptome-wide association studies have identified various genes and genetic variants in lipid metabolism that are associated with Alzheimer’s disease. However, the molecular mechanisms of sphingomyelin and ceramide disruption remain to be determined. We focus on the sphingolipid pathway and carry out multi-omics analyses to identify central and peripheral metabolic changes in Alzheimer’s patients, correlating them to imaging features. Our multi-omics approach is based on (a) 2114 human post-mortem brain transcriptomics to identify differentially expressed genes; (b) in silico metabolic flux analysis on context-specific metabolic networks identified differential reaction fluxes; (c) multimodal neuroimaging analysis on 1576 participants to associate genetic variants in sphingomyelin pathway with Alzheimer’s disease pathogenesis; (d) plasma metabolomic and lipidomic analysis to identify associations of lipid species with dysregulation in Alzheimer’s; and (e) metabolite genome-wide association studies to define receptors within the pathway as a potential drug target. We validate our hypothesis in amyloidogenic APP/PS1 mice and show prolonged exposure to fingolimod alleviated synaptic plasticity and cognitive impairment in mice. Our integrative multi-omics approach identifies potential targets in the sphingomyelin pathway and suggests modulators of S1P metabolism as possible candidates for Alzheimer’s disease treatment.

Funder

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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