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Lipidomic Dysregulation in Alzheimer's Disease: Relation to Genetics, Neuroimaging and Other Biomarkers

Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / Large-scale genome-wide association studies for Alzheimer’s disease (AD) have identified more than 20 risk loci and several pathways including lipid metabolism. Lipids are fundamental to cellular structure and organization, where they compose biological bilayer membranes surrounding the cell. In their structural role, lipids provide a scaffold for cell signaling, such as neurotransmission. There is a large body of evidence linking lipids and AD, yet the relationship between AD pathogenesis and lipid dyshomeostasis is not well understood. Here, we performed manual PubMed searches to identify the most studied lipid classes and risk genes in AD. We discussed pathological alterations of the key lipids and their potential contribution to the recent NIA-AA “A/T/N” framework. We also summarized what is known between the key lipids and etiological hypotheses of AD. Finally, we characterized relationship of the key lipids with AD genomic risk factors to identify possible downstream mechanisms of lipid dysfunction in AD.
There is a large body of evidence linking lipids and AD, yet the relationship between AD pathogenesis and lipid dyshomeostasis is not well understood. In particular, we investigated the association between triglyceride (TG) species and AD. The overall goal was to test the hypothesis that TGs would associate with AD endophenotypes, based on their fatty acid composition. Diagnostic groups (cognitively normal older adults (CN), mild cognitive impairment (MCI), and AD) differed on two principal components extracted from 84 serum TG levels. Fish oil-type and olive oil-type TGs were significantly lower in MCI and AD compared to CN. Next, association analysis of TG principal components with “A/T/N/V” (amyloid-β, tau, neurodegeneration, and cerebrovascular) biomarkers for AD showed that the fish oil-type and olive oil-type TGs were also significantly associated with atrophy on MRI. Finally, a mixed model regression analysis investigated the association between baseline TGs and longitudinal changes of AD endophenotypes to show that olive oil-type TGs predicted changes in AD brain atrophy. Our results indicate that a specific subcategory of TGs is associated with an early prodromal stage of cognitive impairment and early-stage biomarkers for AD, providing the foundation for future therapeutic development related to TG metabolism. / 2023-05-05

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:IUPUI/oai:scholarworks.iupui.edu:1805/25987
Date04 1900
CreatorsBernath, Megan M.
ContributorsSaykin, Andrew J., Nho, Kwangsik, Herbert, Brittney-Shea, Lahiri, Debomoy K., Lamb, Bruce T., Risacher, Shannon L.
Source SetsIndiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeDissertation

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