Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2445/184957
Title: Early signature in the blood lipidome associated with subsequent cognitive decline in the elderly: A case-control analysis nested within the Three-City cohort study
Author: Lefèvre Arbogast, Sophie
Hejblum, Boris P.
Helmer, Catherine
Klose, Christian
Manach, Claudine
Low, Dorrain Yanwen
Urpí Sardà, Mireia
Andrés Lacueva, Ma. Cristina
González-Domínguez, Raúl
Aigner, Ludwig
Altendorfer, Barbara
Lucassen, Paul J.
Ruigrok, Silvie R.
de Lucia, Chiara
Du Preez, Andrea
Proust Lima, Cécile
Thuret, Sandrine
Korosi, Aniko
Samieri, Cécilia
Keywords: Metabòlits
Dieta
Demència
Metabolites
Diet
Dementia
Issue Date: 25-Jan-2021
Publisher: Elsevier
Abstract: Background Brain lipid metabolism appears critical for cognitive aging, but whether alterations in the lipidome relate to cognitive decline remains unclear at the system level. Methods We studied participants from the Three-City study, a multicentric cohort of older persons, free of dementia at time of blood sampling, and who provided repeated measures of cognition over 12 subsequent years. We measured 189 serum lipids from 13 lipid classes using shotgun lipidomics in a case-control sample on cognitive decline (matched on age, sex and level of education) nested within the Bordeaux study center (discovery, n = 418). Associations with cognitive decline were investigated using bootstrapped penalized regression, and tested for validation in the Dijon study center (validation, n = 314). Findings Among 17 lipids identified in the discovery stage, lower levels of the triglyceride TAG50:5, and of four membrane lipids (sphingomyelin SM40:2,2, phosphatidylethanolamine PE38:5(18:1/20:4), ether-phosphatidylethanolamine PEO34:3(16:1/18:2), and ether-phosphatidylcholine PCO34:1(16:1/18:0)), and higher levels of PCO32:0(16:0/16:0), were associated with greater odds of cognitive decline, and replicated in our validation sample. Interpretation These findings indicate that in the blood lipidome of non-demented older persons, a specific profile of lipids involved in membrane fluidity, myelination, and lipid rafts, is associated with subsequent cognitive decline. Funding The complete list of funders is available at the end of the manuscript, in the Acknowledgement section.
Note: Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ebiom.2021.103216
It is part of: EBioMedicine, 2021
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2445/184957
Related resource: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ebiom.2021.103216
ISSN: 2352-3964
Appears in Collections:Articles publicats en revistes (Nutrició, Ciències de l'Alimentació i Gastronomia)

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