Imaging Genetics Center, Mark and Mary Stevens Neuroimaging and Informatics Institute, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, Marina del Rey, CA 90292, USA.
Department of Epidemiology, Graduate School of Public Health, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15261, USA.
Neuroimage. 2018 May 15;172:118-129. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2017.12.027. Epub 2018 Jan 28.
Inflammatory processes may contribute to risk for Alzheimer's disease (AD) and age-related brain degeneration. Metabolic and genetic risk factors, and physical activity may, in turn, influence these inflammatory processes. Some of these risk factors are modifiable, and interact with each other. Understanding how these processes together relate to brain aging will help to inform future interventions to treat or prevent cognitive decline. We used brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to scan 335 older adult humans (mean age 77.3 ± 3.4 years) who remained non-demented for the duration of the 9-year longitudinal study. We used structural equation modeling (SEM) in a subset of 226 adults to evaluate whether measures of baseline peripheral inflammation (serum C-reactive protein levels; CRP), mediated the baseline contributions of genetic and metabolic risk, and physical activity, to regional cortical thickness in AD-relevant brain regions at study year 9. We found that both baseline metabolic risk and AD risk variant apolipoprotein E ε4 (APOE4), modulated baseline serum CRP. Higher baseline CRP levels, in turn, predicted thinner regional cortex at year 9, and mediated an effect between higher metabolic risk and thinner cortex in those regions. A higher polygenic risk score composed of variants in immune-associated AD risk genes (other than APOE) was associated with thinner regional cortex. However, CRP levels did not mediate this effect, suggesting that other mechanisms may be responsible for the elevated AD risk. We found interactions between genetic and environmental factors and structural brain health. Our findings support the role of metabolic risk and peripheral inflammation in age-related brain decline.
炎症过程可能导致阿尔茨海默病(AD)和与年龄相关的大脑退化的风险。代谢和遗传风险因素以及体育活动反过来可能影响这些炎症过程。其中一些风险因素是可以改变的,并且相互作用。了解这些过程如何共同影响大脑衰老将有助于为未来治疗或预防认知能力下降的干预措施提供信息。我们使用脑磁共振成像(MRI)扫描了 335 名年龄在 77.3±3.4 岁的老年成年人(平均年龄),他们在 9 年的纵向研究期间仍然没有痴呆。我们在 226 名成年人的亚组中使用结构方程模型(SEM)来评估基线外周炎症(血清 C 反应蛋白水平;CRP)的测量是否在基线时遗传和代谢风险以及体育活动对 AD 相关脑区的区域皮质厚度的贡献,在研究的第 9 年。我们发现,基线代谢风险和载脂蛋白 E ε4(APOE4)等 AD 风险变异体都调节基线血清 CRP。反过来,较高的基线 CRP 水平预示着第 9 年区域皮质变薄,并且在这些区域中,较高的代谢风险和较薄的皮质之间存在中介效应。由免疫相关 AD 风险基因(除 APOE 外)中的变体组成的较高多基因风险评分与区域皮质变薄有关。然而,CRP 水平并未介导此影响,这表明其他机制可能负责升高的 AD 风险。我们发现遗传和环境因素与结构脑健康之间存在相互作用。我们的研究结果支持代谢风险和外周炎症在与年龄相关的大脑衰退中的作用。