AI Article Synopsis

  • Cognitive resilience (CR) plays a crucial role in determining the risk and progression of Alzheimer's disease (AD), influenced by lifestyle factors rather than just genetics.
  • The study identified specific DNA methylation changes linked to a Resilience Index (RI) based on lifestyle factors, revealing connections to pathways involved in lipid metabolism, synaptic plasticity, and neuroinflammation.
  • A new Methylation-based Resilience Score (MRS) was developed, successfully predicting future cognitive decline, suggesting that DNA methylation could serve as a potential predictive marker for AD and guiding future research.

Article Abstract

Cognitive resilience (CR) contributes to the variability in risk for developing and progressing in Alzheimer's disease (AD) among individuals. Beyond genetics, recent studies highlight the critical role of lifestyle factors in enhancing CR and delaying cognitive decline. DNA methylation (DNAm), an epigenetic mechanism influenced by both genetic and environmental factors, including CR-related lifestyle factors, offers a promising pathway for understanding the biology of CR. We studied DNAm changes associated with the Resilience Index (RI), a composite measure of lifestyle factors, using blood samples from the Healthy Brain Initiative (HBI) cohort. After corrections for multiple comparisons, our analysis identified 19 CpGs and 24 differentially methylated regions significantly associated with the RI, adjusting for covariates age, sex, , and immune cell composition. The RI-associated methylation changes are significantly enriched in pathways related to lipid metabolism, synaptic plasticity, and neuroinflammation, and highlight the connection between cardiovascular health and cognitive function. By identifying RI-associated DNAm, our study provided an alternative approach to discovering future targets and treatment strategies for AD, complementary to the traditional approach of identifying disease-associated variants directly. Furthermore, we developed a Methylation-based Resilience Score (MRS) that successfully predicted future cognitive decline in an external dataset from the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI), even after accounting for age, sex, , years of education, baseline diagnosis, and baseline MMSE score. Our findings are particularly relevant for a better understanding of epigenetic architecture underlying cognitive resilience. Importantly, the significant association between baseline MRS and future cognitive decline demonstrated that DNAm could be a predictive marker for AD, laying the foundation for future studies on personalized AD prevention.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11623774PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-5423573/v1DOI Listing

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