Causal association of circulating inflammatory proteins on neurodegenerative diseases: Insights from a mendelian randomization study

Wenwen Lin, Xuewei Wu, Guanyong Ou
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Abstract

Neuroinflammation is increasingly recognized as a pivotal factor in the development and progression of neurodegenerative disorders. While correlations between inflammatory cytokines and these diseases are documented, the definitive causal dynamics remain to be elucidated. We explored the causal association between 91 circulating inflammatory cytokines and Alzheimer's disease (AD), amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), multiple sclerosis (MS) and Parkinson's disease (PD) through Mendelian randomization analysis. Leveraging genetic variants from the most comprehensive genome-wide association studies (GWAS) available for these cytokines, AD, ALS, MS and PD, we sought to uncover the causality. Our study validated a causal influence of genetically determined cytokine levels on the susceptibility to AD, with notable cytokines including C-X-C motif chemokine 1 (OR = 0.9993, p = 0.0424), Interleukin-18 (OR = 0.9994, p = 0.0186), Leukaemia inhibitory factor receptor (OR = 0.9993, p = 0.0122) and Monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (OR = 0.9992, p = 0.0026) in risk attenuation. Additionally, a positive causal relationship was identified between two cytokines—C-C motif chemokine 19 (OR = 1.0005, p = 0.0478) and Fms-related tyrosine kinase 3 ligand (OR = 1.0005, p = 0.0210)—and AD incidence. Conversely, transforming growth factor-alpha (OR = 0.8630, p = 0.0298), CD40L receptor (OR = 0.7737, p = 1.1265E-09) and Interleukin-12 subunit beta (OR = 0.8987, p = 0.0333) showed inverse associations with ALS, MS and PD, respectively. The consistency observed in various MR analyses, alongside sensitivity analysis, underscored the absence of horizontal pleiotropy, thus supporting our causal findings. This study reveals, for the first time, a genetically anchored causal nexus between levels of circulating inflammatory cytokines and the risk of neurodegenerative diseases.

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循环炎症蛋白与神经退行性疾病的因果关系:亡羊补牢式随机研究的启示
神经炎症越来越被认为是神经退行性疾病发生和发展的关键因素。虽然炎性细胞因子与这些疾病之间的相关性已被记录在案,但明确的因果关系仍有待阐明。我们通过孟德尔随机分析法探讨了 91 种循环炎性细胞因子与阿尔茨海默病(AD)、肌萎缩侧索硬化症(ALS)、多发性硬化症(MS)和帕金森病(PD)之间的因果关系。利用对这些细胞因子、AD、ALS、MS 和 PD 进行的最全面的全基因组关联研究(GWAS)中的遗传变异,我们试图揭示其中的因果关系。我们的研究验证了由基因决定的细胞因子水平对 AD 易感性的因果影响,其中值得注意的细胞因子包括 C-X-C motif 趋化因子 1(OR = 0.9993,p = 0.0424)、白细胞介素-18(OR = 0.9994,p = 0.0186)、白血病抑制因子受体(OR = 0.9993,p = 0.0122)和单核细胞趋化蛋白-1(OR = 0.9992,p = 0.0026)等细胞因子在降低风险方面有显著作用。此外,还发现两种细胞因子--C-C motif趋化因子19(OR = 1.0005,p = 0.0478)和Fms相关酪氨酸激酶3配体(OR = 1.0005,p = 0.0210)--与AD发病率之间存在正向因果关系。相反,转化生长因子-α(OR = 0.8630,p = 0.0298)、CD40L 受体(OR = 0.7737,p = 1.1265E-09)和白细胞介素-12 亚基 beta(OR = 0.8987,p = 0.0333)分别与 ALS、MS 和 PD 呈反向关系。在各种磁共振分析和敏感性分析中观察到的一致性强调了不存在水平多效性,从而支持了我们的因果关系研究结果。这项研究首次揭示了循环炎症细胞因子水平与神经退行性疾病风险之间的遗传因果关系。
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期刊介绍: The Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine serves as a bridge between physiology and cellular medicine, as well as molecular biology and molecular therapeutics. With a 20-year history, the journal adopts an interdisciplinary approach to showcase innovative discoveries. It publishes research aimed at advancing the collective understanding of the cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying diseases. The journal emphasizes translational studies that translate this knowledge into therapeutic strategies. Being fully open access, the journal is accessible to all readers.
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