Metabolomics and incident dementia in older Chinese adults: The Shanghai Aging Study
Mei Cui, Yanfeng Jiang, Qianhua Zhao, Zhen Zhu, Xiaoniu Liang, Kexun Zhang, Wanqing Wu, Qiang Dong, Yanpeng An, Huiru Tang, Ding Ding, Xingdong Chen
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Metabolomics provide a promising tool to understand the pathogenesis and to identify novel biomarkers of dementia. This study aimed to determine circulating metabolites associated with incident dementia in a Chinese cohort, and whether a selected metabolite panel could predict dementia. METHODS: Thirty-eight metabolites in baseline serum were profiled by nuclear magnetic resonance in 1440 dementia-free participants followed 5 years in the Shanghai Aging Study. RESULTS: Higher serum levels of glutamine and O-acetyl-glycoproteins were associated with increased risk of dementia, whereas glutamate, tyrosine, acetate, glycine, and phenylalanine were negatively related to incident dementia. A panel of five metabolites selected by least absolute shrinkage and selection operator within cross-validation regression analysis could predict incident dementia with an area under the receiver-operating characteristic curve of 0.72. DISCUSSION: We identified seven candidate serum metabolic biomarkers for dementia. These findings and the underlying biological mechanisms need to be further replicated and elucidated in future studies.